Topline
Ghislaine Maxwell will formally ask President Donald Trump to commute her prison sentence, according to whistleblower documents obtained by House Democrats, potentially paving the way for Trump to grant clemency to the longtime Jeffrey Epstein associate after she claimed Trump was not involved in Epstein’s crimes.
Ghislaine Maxwell and Donald Trump attend an event in New York City on Oct. 30, 1997.
NY Daily News via Getty Images
Key Facts
Maxwell is preparing a “commutation application” to request Trump commute her prison sentence, according to documents given from an anonymous whistleblower to Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee.
Maxwell is serving a 20-year prison sentence after being convicted on sex trafficking charges in connection with Epstein, who was accused of abusing more than 100 women with Maxwell’s help prior to his death in 2019.
The “exact content” of the commutation application is still “unclear,” Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin, D-Md., noted in a letter to Trump on Sunday, but claimed the whistleblower documents indicate Maxwell “has good reason to believe that, despite her sentence for child sex trafficking, she may receive the extraordinary grant of clemency.”
Raskin discussed the commutation application as part of a broader request to Trump for more information about Maxwell’s prison sentence, after the Epstein associate was controversially transferred to a minimum-security facility in Texas after speaking with the DOJ about Epstein—and saying Trump was not at all involved with the financier’s crimes.
Trump has not ruled out commuting Maxwell’s sentence or granting her a pardon, saying in October only that he would “have to take a look at it” and he “wouldn’t consider it or not consider.”
Maxwell’s attorney, David Oscar Markus, has not yet responded to a request for comment, and White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson told Forbes the White House “does not comment on clemency requests,” adding, “As President Trump has stated, pardoning Ghislaine Maxwell is not something he has thought about.”
Surprising Fact
While much about Maxwell’s commutation application is still unknown, the whistleblower documents indicate she’s preparing it with help from the warden at her prison facility. In an email titled “RE: Commutation Application,” which was provided to House Democrats and reported by Politico, Maxwell told attorney Leah Saffian she was sending application materials through the warden. “I am struggling to keep it all together as it is big and there are so many attachments,” Maxwell wrote in the email about her application materials, as quoted by Politico. “More coming to replace others..hopefully it will all make sense.”