Court Filing: 129
Summary
The government responds to a court order regarding Ghislaine Maxwell's access to a laptop for reviewing discovery on weekends and holidays, deferring to the MDC's judgment while noting the defendant's extensive access to discovery materials. The government has provided a laptop and reformatted discovery materials to facilitate her review. Maxwell has been allowed 13 hours a day, 7 days a week access to review discovery.
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Court Filing: 128
The government responds to the court's order regarding the defendant's proposed redactions to pre-trial motions, agreeing with most redactions while suggesting additional ones to protect ongoing investigations and victim-witnesses' privacy. The letter is part of the United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell case.
Court Filing: 162
The document is a letter from the US Attorney's Office to Judge Alison J. Nathan, requesting to file certain court documents under seal or with redactions to protect sensitive information. The government is submitting an unredacted version of their memorandum of law and exhibits in opposition to the defendant's pre-trial motions, while proposing redactions to certain documents to protect third-party privacy and the integrity of their investigation.
Court Filing: 170
The document is a letter from the United States Attorney's office to Judge Alison J. Nathan, discussing the proposed redactions to court documents in the case against Ghislaine Maxwell. The parties have reached an agreement on redactions to Exhibit 11 and the defendant's cover letter. The Government is submitting its omnibus memorandum of law with proposed redactions under seal for the Court's consideration.
Court Filing: 227
The Government submits a letter to Judge Alison J. Nathan stating they won't use certain materials subject to suppression motions in their case-in-chief at Ghislaine Maxwell's trial, but reserves the right to use them if the defense puts these materials at issue or if the defendant testifies. The Government opposes the suppression motions and argues that even if materials are suppressed, they can still be used for impeachment or other permissible purposes under the Rules of Evidence.
Court Filing: 241
The Government submitted a letter to the Court requesting redactions to certain documents related to the defense's proposed Rule 17(c) subpoena, citing the need to protect third-party privacy interests. The Court granted the request, ordering the Defendant and Boies Schiller to docket the documents with the proposed redactions.
Court Filing: 278
The government submits a letter to Judge Alison J. Nathan requesting limited redactions to the defendant's memorandum and seeking to file certain exhibits under seal to protect the privacy interests of victims and third parties. The proposed redactions are justified under the three-part test articulated in Lugosch v. Pyramid Co. of Onondaga. The government is submitting proposed redactions to the Court by email.
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