Ghislaine Maxwell, DOJ and Trump
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A senior administration official confirms to NBC News that Ghislaine Maxwell was granted limited immunity by the Justice Department in order to answer questions about the Jeffrey Epstein case. This type of immunity allowed Maxwell to answer questions from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche without fear that the information she provided could later be used against her in any future cases or proceedings.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche met on Thursday with Ghislaine Maxwell for several hours at a federal courthouse in Tallahassee, Florida.
The disgraced British socialite, wearing all brown, was handcuffed in the front and led through a barbed-wire-laced fenced-in area in front of the prison.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche met with Ghislaine Maxwell in Florida about the case involving convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Trump continued to not rule out pardoning Ghislane Maxwell. He also said he "never had the privilege of going to" Epstein's private island
Illinois, sought all recordings and related transcripts in a letter to Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, the former Trump personal defense lawyer who conducted the interviews with Maxwell last week in Tallahassee,