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Accuser testifies Jeffrey Epstein brought her to meet Donald Trump when she was 14; no wrongdoing alleged

By Lauren del Valle and Eric Levenson, CNN

A woman who said she was sexually abused by Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein more than two decades ago testified in court Wednesday that she met Donald Trump when Epstein took her to Mar-a-Lago when she was 14 years old.

The woman, identified in court under the pseudonym “Jane,” also testified that she flew on Epstein’s private plane several times along with Prince Andrew, celebrity chef Adam Perry Lang and Epstein’s mother and brother.

She did not accuse the former President or any of the other plane passengers of wrongdoing. She also testified Epstein never asked her to recruit other girls or asked her to be involved in sex acts with anyone else. CNN has reached out to Trump for comment.

Her testimony came during Maxwell’s criminal trial on six federal charges, including sex trafficking of minors, in what prosecutors say was a scheme to lure and recruit underage girls for Epstein’s sexual purposes. The trial has already illuminated some of Epstein’s connections to high-profile figures like Trump, Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew.

Maxwell, Epstein and Trump were part of similar social orbits, with both men maintaining residences in Palm Beach, Florida, and New York. And they were photographed together, sometimes with Trump’s then-girlfriend, Melania Knauss, several times throughout the 1990s and 2000s.

In 2002, Trump told New York Magazine, “I’ve known Jeff for fifteen years. Terrific guy,” adding that Epstein had a reputation for young women.

Last year, Trump was asked about the charges against Maxwell and said he wishes her “well.” Trump has told reporters in recent years that he banned Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago estate, but has never explained why their friendship ended.

Epstein, who had pleaded guilty in 2008 to state prostitution charges, was indicted on federal sex trafficking charges in July 2019. He was found dead in his prison cell a month afterward from what the medical examiner ruled a suicide. Maxwell, the British socialite and Epstein’s close confidante, was arrested a year later and has pleaded not guilty.

In opening statements Monday, prosecutors said Maxwell and Epstein created a “pyramid scheme of abuse” to lure underage girls into sexual relationships with Epstein. Her defense, meanwhile, said she was a “scapegoat” for Epstein’s actions and attacked the memories and motivations of the women who say they were sexually abused.

Epstein’s private pilot was the prosecution’s first witness in the trial and testified that Maxwell was Epstein’s “go-to person” for non-business related issues. The pilot, Larry Visoski, name-dropped a series of powerful men who flew aboard the plane. Visoski also testified he never saw any sexual activity on board.

Defense challenges Jane on inconsistencies

Jane, the prosecution’s second witness, began her testimony Tuesday and said she first met Maxwell and Epstein in 1994 when she was 14. They spent time with her, asked about her family and interests and took her to do fun things, and for a time Maxwell felt like an older sister, she testified.

Then the abuse began, she said. She described incidents of sexual abuse with Epstein that Maxwell would at times join in on, both in Palm Beach and Manhattan when she was 14, 15 and 16 years old. She testified that Epstein would masturbate on her and molest her, and Maxwell would sometimes be involved, touching her and Epstein. At least once, Maxwell “instructed” her how Epstein liked to be massaged while the three were in Epstein’s “massage room,” she testified.

In cross-examination on Wednesday, Jane named several women she recalled being involved in the group sexualized massages she categorized as “orgies.” She said she could likely recognize them if shown photos, but acknowledged that no law enforcement ever reviewed any photos with her to identify.

Witness breaks down during second day of testimony

Defense attorney Laura Menninger asked Jane about her long career in acting and entertainment.

“Essentially, there’s no melodramatic role that you haven’t played,” the defense lawyer said, recapping some of Jane’s screen roles over the years.

Could she cry on command? Menninger asked.

“It’s not really how it works,” Jane said.

On re-direct, prosecutor Alison Moe later asked the witness whether she knew the difference between television acting and testifying under oath.

“Testifying in court is real,” Jane responded. “It’s the truth.”

“I am here to hopefully, finally, find some sort of closure to all of this,” Jane responded when asked why she was on the stand. “This is something that I have been running from my entire life up until now. And I’m just tired of it.”

Jane testified that she kept quiet about the abuse because she didn’t believe her mother would support her.

Later, Jane’s voiced cracked as she recalled for the prosecutor the time it took her to share her story with law enforcement — “sitting in a room full of strangers and telling them the most shameful deepest secrets that I had been carrying around with me my whole life.”

Jane sobbed when the prosecutor asked about the money she received from the Epstein Victim Compensation Fund. She gasped for breath and wiped her face with a tissue before answering.

“In this country, compensation is the only thing you can get to try to move on with your life and for the … pain and abuse and suffering that I received and all the out-of-pocket money I paid to try and make this go away and to try to fix myself,” she told the court.

Earlier, Menninger spent significant time combing through previous statements Jane made in law enforcement interviews since 2019 showing potential inconsistencies with her testimony in court.

Menninger asked her a series of questions about statements in which Jane told law enforcement agents that she wasn’t sure if Maxwell ever touched her and she didn’t remember Maxwell ever being present for any sexual activity between her and Epstein. Jane repeatedly said she didn’t recall if she’d said that to investigators.

At other times Jane said while reviewing the law enforcement notes from those interviews on the witness stand that the notes were inaccurate, at times inconsistent with her timeline and not an accurate transcript of her statements which were not recorded.

The woman said she hired a lawyer around 2007 to help stop false press reports about her and Epstein and deal with people “harassing” her about her connection to Epstein. She acknowledged speaking to Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s attorney Brad Edwards, a plaintiff attorney for several Epstein accusers, when he contacted her, but also said she didn’t want anything to do with the prosecution of Epstein then and did not share her allegations with law enforcement at that time.

After nearly eight hours on the stand over two days, Jane composed herself and walked quickly away from the witness stand with a fistful of tissues when her testimony was over.

‘How do you think I got the money, mom?’

Jane’s former boyfriend testified briefly on Wednesday, saying she told him the financial help her family received from “godfather” Jeffrey Epstein “wasn’t free.”

The ex-boyfriend testified under the pseudonym of “Matt,” noting that in the first years of their relationship, in the mid 2000s, Jane talked about a man who was like a “godfather” or “uncle” who helped her family financially. She revealed that person was Epstein when news of his arrest in Florida surfaced.

Matt testified Jane did not get in much detail about the abuse by Epstein but would tell him the “money wasn’t f****** free.”

Jane told Matt that having a woman around when she was with Epstein made her more comfortable but she didn’t reveal the woman’s name, he told the court. After reports of Maxwell’s arrest in 2019, Matt said, Jane revealed her name to him.

On the stand, Matt recalled Jane confronting her mother about the abuse around 2011 and accusing her of turning a blind eye.

“How do you think I got the money, mom?” he recalled her saying.

“Jane told her mother that the money was not free and that there’s no way that she couldn’t have known that it wasn’t free,” he testified.

The defense had no questions for Matt.

Outside court later, Maxwell’s brother Kevin told reporters that Wednesday was the first time he was been able to speak with her in person in more than 500 days.

“It gave me a tremendous sense of relief to be close to her, to be able to see her in the flesh and even to be able to speak with her,” Kevin Maxwell said of his younger sister.

The-CNN-Wire
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CNN’s Ray Sanchez contributed to this report.

Article Topic Follows: CNN - National

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