Justice Department can unseal Ghislaine Maxwell sex trafficking case records, judge says [View all]
Last edited Tue Dec 9, 2025, 10:18 AM - Edit history (1)
Source: AP
Updated 9:45 AM EST, December 9, 2025
NEW YORK (AP) The Justice Department can publicly release investigative materials from a sex trafficking case against Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime confidant of Jeffrey Epstein, a federal judge said on Tuesday.
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer ruled after the Justice Department in November asked two judges in New York to unseal grand jury transcripts and exhibits from Maxwell and Epsteins cases, along with investigative materials that could amount to hundreds or thousands of previously unreleased documents.
The ruling, in the wake of the passage last month of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, means the records could be made public within 10 days. The law requires the Justice Department provide Epstein-related records to the public in a searchable format by Dec. 19.
Engelmayer is the second judge to allow the Justice Department to publicly disclose previously secret Epstein court records. Last week, a judge in Florida granted the departments request to release transcripts from an abandoned federal grand jury investigation into Epstein in the 2000s. A request to release records from Epsteins 2019 sex trafficking case is still pending.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/epstein-maxwell-sex-trafficking-case-records-8e3985dd977cb94ef41b9581115ef61b
Just breaking.
Article updated.
Original article/headline -
Judge grants Justice Department request to unseal Ghislaine Maxwell records in sex trafficking case
Updated 9:34 AM EST, December 9, 2025
NEW YORK (AP) The Justice Department can publicly release investigative materials from a sex trafficking case against Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime confidant of Jeffrey Epstein, a federal judge said on Tuesday.
Judge Paul A. Engelmayer ruled after the Justice Department in November asked two judges in New York to unseal grand jury transcripts and exhibits from Maxwell and Epsteins cases, along with investigative materials that could amount to hundreds or thousands of previously unreleased documents.
The ruling, in the wake of the passage last month of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, means the records could be made public within 10 days. The law requires the Justice Department provide Epstein-related records to the public in a searchable format by Dec. 19.
Engelmayer is the second judge to allow the Justice Department to publicly disclose previously secret Epstein court records. Last week, a judge in Florida granted the departments request to release transcripts from an abandoned federal grand jury investigation into Epstein in the 2000s. A request to release records from Epsteins 2019 sex trafficking case is still pending.