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But the claims don’t stop there.
Maxwell further alleges that four former Epstein employees — individuals whose names appeared in both Epstein’s controversial non-prosecution agreement and his 2019 federal indictment — were never charged, despite their documented involvement in Epstein’s operations.
According to Maxwell, this selective prosecution was no accident.
She asserts that federal prosecutors and civil attorneys worked together to conceal critical information, effectively depriving her of a fair trial and shielding others from legal scrutiny.
“If the jury had heard of the new evidence of the collusion between the plaintiff’s lawyers and the government to conceal evidence and the prosecutorial misconduct, they would not have convicted,” Maxwell wrote.
Maxwell was convicted in 2021 on five federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor and conspiracy to transport minors for illegal sexual activity. She was later sentenced to 20 years in federal prison for recruiting, grooming, and delivering young girls to Epstein — a financier with deep ties to political elites, royalty, and global power brokers.
Epstein himself died in federal custody in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges, a death officially ruled a suicide but one that continues to fuel widespread skepticism and unanswered questions.
Maxwell’s latest filing reignites long-standing concerns about how many individuals were involved in Epstein’s network — and why only two people have ever been charged.
Her claims come amid the rollout of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a law passed by Congress in November that mandates the Department of Justice to release all records tied to Epstein’s federal investigations and plea agreements.
In December, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche confirmed that the DOJ is still combing through a massive volume of material ahead of its public release.
“It truly is an all-hands-on-deck approach and we’re asking as many lawyers as possible to commit their time to review the documents that remain,” Blanche said. “Required redactions to protect victims take time but they will not stop these materials from being released.”
Under the law, all Epstein-related records were supposed to be fully released by December 19, 2025. However, as of last week, only 12,285 files had been made available through the DOJ’s newly launched “Epstein Library.”
Federal officials have cited victim protection and redaction requirements as reasons for the delay — explanations that critics argue conveniently slow the exposure of powerful figures.
The released records include evidence tied to Epstein’s deeply criticized 2008 plea deal in Florida, which allowed him to serve just 13 months in a county jail despite federal prosecutors identifying more than 30 underage victims. That deal also granted immunity to unnamed “potential co-conspirators,” language that has remained a flashpoint for outrage and suspicion.
Whether the 25 individuals referenced in Maxwell’s filing fall under that immunity — or entered separate civil settlements that quietly neutralized criminal risk — remains unknown.
What is known is this: only Epstein and Maxwell have ever been criminally charged in connection with one of the most notorious sex-trafficking operations in modern history.
Maxwell is currently serving her sentence at a minimum-security federal prison in Texas, having been transferred from Florida last year. That transfer reportedly followed an interview with federal officials — including Deputy Attorney General Blanche — regarding Epstein’s broader network and the government’s transparency obligations.
She is scheduled to give sworn testimony before the House Oversight Committee on February 9 as part of a congressional investigation into the federal government’s handling of the Epstein case. However, her attorney has filed a motion seeking to delay that appearance unless Maxwell is granted clemency.
As more documents trickle out and new allegations surface, one question continues to loom large: Who else knew — and who else walked free?




