Court Order and attached letter from the Bureau of Prisons: 117
Summary
The document is a court order from Judge Alison J. Nathan, responding to a letter from the Bureau of Prisons requesting that the court vacate its previous order allowing Ghislaine Maxwell access to her government-provided laptop on weekends and holidays. The Bureau of Prisons argues that Maxwell has sufficient time to review discovery materials during the week and that the previous order should be vacated.
This document is from the epstein-docs Archive.
View Source CollectionPersons Referenced (7)
Related Documents (6)
Court Filing: 561
The Government submits a letter to Judge Alison J. Nathan requesting the release of certain Government exhibits admitted during Ghislaine Maxwell's trial, with some exhibits to be temporarily sealed pending the Court's ruling.
Court Filing - Letter to Judge: 166
The letter, filed on March 15, 2021, informs Judge Alison J. Nathan that the defense team for Ghislaine Maxwell will be filing multiple reply memoranda in support of various motions. The letter discusses the procedure for filing these documents, including redactions and sealing due to confidential information. The defense team will submit the documents to the court and government via email, awaiting further instruction on public filing.
Letter to the Judge: 258
The letter from Bobbi C. Sternheim to Judge Alison J. Nathan disputes the MDC's allegations of misconduct by Maxwell's counsel during a legal visit, and highlights the MDC's alleged confiscation and reading of Maxwell's confidential legal materials, requesting the Court to direct the MDC to provide a copy of the video recording.
Letter to the Court: 464
Defense attorney Bobbi C. Sternheim writes to Judge Alison J. Nathan to report that Ghislaine Maxwell received government disclosures nine days after they were sent, and requests that the government use expedited delivery for future disclosures.
Letter to the Judge: 557
The letter from Bobbi C. Sternheim to Judge Alison J. Nathan discusses the jury charge and instructions in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial, noting that the defense did not object to the court's redline of the draft jury charge and responding to a government letter regarding proposed edits.
Court Filing - Letter to Judge: 727
The defense and prosecution submitted a joint letter to Judge Alison J. Nathan regarding the court's proposed list of jurors to be struck from the jury pool. The defense and government largely agreed on the court's proposal but had some disagreements on specific jurors.
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.