Court Filing: 703
Summary
The Government is moving to preclude the defendant, Ghislaine Maxwell, from introducing a sale agreement for her London home as evidence in her case-in-chief due to her failure to disclose it in a timely manner under Rule 16. The agreement was produced after the close of the Government's case, potentially prejudicing the Government. The Government argues that the defendant's untimely disclosure violates her Rule 16 obligations and that the agreement should be excluded.
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Court Order: 684
The court orders the government to docket a motion by Kate's attorney that was referenced in the defendant's letter, as it was not received by the court. The government is required to docket the motion by midnight on June 26, 2022. The order is issued by Judge Alison J. Nathan.
Court Filing: 107
The defense team for Ghislaine Maxwell requests a two-week extension to file pretrial motions and modify the briefing schedule due to COVID-19 restrictions and the large volume of discovery. The government consents to the requested extension. The proposed new deadlines are January 25, 2021, for the defendant's motions, February 26, 2021, for the government's response, and March 5, 2021, for the defendant's reply.
Court Order: 127
The court has received twelve pre-trial motions from the defendant, some of which have been filed under temporary seal due to sensitive information. The government is given two days to respond to the proposed redactions. The order is issued by Judge Alison J. Nathan.
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: 129
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.
Court Order: 132
The court order addresses Ghislaine Maxwell's pre-trial motions, adopting her proposed redactions and some additional ones suggested by the government to protect sensitive information and third-party privacy. The court applies the Lugosch test to justify the redactions, and orders the defendant to file the redacted documents by February 5, 2021.
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