Ghislaine Maxwell loses sex trafficking appeal

Ghislaine Maxwellâs appeal against her sex trafficking conviction has been rejected by a US court.
Maxwell, 62, was found guilty in December 2021 of helping disgraced financier Jeffery Epstein sexually abuse young girls.
She was sentenced to 20 years in prison in June 2022.
Judges at Manhattanâs Second US Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Maxwellâs five convictions and said her sentence was âprocedurally reasonableâ.
Epstein, a former boyfriend of Maxwellâs, died by suicide in 2019 in a Manhattan jail cell, five weeks after he was arrested and charged with sex trafficking.
Maxwell had claimed that she should be set free under the terms of a 2008 deal between Epstein and federal prosecutors in Florida.
Under the agreement, prosecutors agreed not to pursue his alleged co-conspirators.
Maxwellâs lawyers argued in March that the British socialite âshould never have been prosecutedâ, because of the âweirdâ agreement.
But three judges dismissed her arguments, saying Epsteinâs non-prosecution deal was intended to bind only prosecutors in southern Florida.
The judgment also dismissed Maxwellâs claims that she did not have a fair trial because one of the jurors did not disclose that he had been sexually abused as a child.
Throughout the course of Maxwellâs 2022 trial, four women testified that they had been abused as minors at Epsteinâs homes in Florida, New York, New Mexico and the Virgin Islands.
They recounted how Maxwell, who is the daughter of former Daily Mirror owner Robert Maxwell, had talked them into giving Epstein massages which turned sexual.
They claimed they were lured with gifts and promises about how Epstein could use his money and connections to help them.
During her trial, a judge rejected attempts to throw out the case, including an argument by Maxwellâs lawyers that she had not been allowed to prepare adequately for her trial and that prosecutors had waited too long to bring their case against her.