BREAKING: DOJ Releases Complete Transcript and Audio Of Ghislaine Maxwell Private Testimony To AG Blanche
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BREAKING: DOJ Releases Complete Transcript and Audio Of Ghislaine Maxwell Private Testimony To AG Blanche

A few weeks ago, AG Todd Blanche met with Ghislaine Maxwell and took two days of private testimony. Today the DOJ just released the complete transcript and audio from those two days with nothing hidden or redacted except except for the names of victims, every word is included. Nothing removed. Nothing hidden. Take a look here: BREAKING: The DOJ has released the complete transcript and audio of AG Blanche’s proffer of Ms. Maxwell.. Blanche says the audio is divided into segments to reflect breaks during the interview. Some segments are shorter than others. Shorter segments are a result of audio tests… pic.twitter.com/pVoOCS4i8r — Melissa Hallman (@dotconnectinga) August 22, 2025 The official Justice.gov links to all transcripts and audio files can be found here:  https://www.justice.gov/maxwell-interview But since that is wildly overwhelming and would take a lot of time to soak in, I’ve got a Top 10 list of the key takeaways summarized for you right here: Top 10 Biggest Takeaways from the Maxwell DOJ Interviews (July 24–25, 2025) 1. Maxwell Wanted to Cooperate All Along She claimed she had repeatedly asked to speak with the government since the early 2000s but was ignored — even before her indictment. If true, this challenges the narrative that she was completely uncooperative until convicted. 2. Robert Maxwell & Epstein Never Met Maxwell was emphatic that her father never knew or met Epstein. She explained Robert Maxwell vetted Epstein through Bear Stearns contacts before allowing her to continue seeing him. This undercuts theories that Epstein was linked to intelligence through Robert Maxwell. 3. Epstein’s “Heart Condition” & Sexual Habits She said Epstein claimed a heart condition that limited intercourse and pushed him toward “other sexual activities.” This is one of the first direct explanations Maxwell has given about Epstein’s sex life, reframing his behavior medically rather than purely predatory. 4. Relationship Was Less Romantic Than Believed Maxwell insisted she never lived full-time with Epstein, rarely spent nights in his New York residence, and that his “true partner” in the 1990s was Eva Andersson Dubin. This contrasts with media portrayals of her as his constant romantic companion. 5. Maxwell’s Salary & Role as “General Manager” She described herself as a salaried employee (starting at $25,000/year, later higher) and essentially a property manager for Epstein’s estates. This reframing casts her more as a staffer than co-conspirator. 6. The Money Question — She Denied $30M Were “Payments for Girls” DOJ pressed her about $18.3M (1999), $5M (2002), $7.4M (2007). Maxwell said those were tied to business ventures (real estate flips, exotic car trades, helicopters), not payments for trafficking. This is a direct rejection of the prosecution’s central narrative. 7. Maxwell’s Independent Ventures She claimed she held Series 63/67 broker licenses, actively day-traded, and launched joint ventures with Epstein (real estate, luxury cars). That detail of her actively trading Apple/Microsoft in the ’90s had not been highlighted before. 8. High-Profile Contacts Clarified Elon Musk: She met him around 2010 at Sergey Brin’s Caribbean birthday event, later at the Oscars. Said Epstein and Musk emailed, but she had no personal link. Les Wexner: Called him Epstein’s “closest friend” for years, but said Epstein kept her away from him, possibly lying about why. Trump: Reiterated she never saw or heard any inappropriate behavior from him. These specifics add context to longstanding speculation. 9. Maxwell Claimed Epstein Misled & Isolated Her She said discovery revealed Epstein told people to lie to her, concealed other women, and admitted “he never loved me and I wasn’t his type.” Suggests she is casting herself as another person deceived and used by Epstein. 10. Explicit Denial of Recruitment Role When pressed, she categorically denied receiving money for recruiting underage girls, calling it “completely false.” She admitted Epstein “took care of her” with salary and lifestyle but rejected the central allegation she was financially rewarded for trafficking. In short:The interviews provided the first detailed portrait of Maxwell’s own defense narrative: She was Epstein’s manager/assistant, not recruiter. Big financial transfers were business-related, not criminal payoffs. She insists she tried to cooperate for decades. She offered new detail on Epstein’s sex life, her limited romantic involvement, and clarified her links to high-profile figures.