Ghislaine Maxwell, Congress
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Ghislaine Maxwell will plead the Fifth Amendment in response to a congressional subpoena to testify about deceased sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein — unless several demands are
House Oversight Committee rejects Ghislaine Maxwell's request for immunity, which she was demanding in exchange for her congressional testimony amid a probe into Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking crimes.
Maxwell's lawyers said in a letter on Tuesday that Maxwell would be willing to testify before Congress if she received formal immunity, alongside other requests.
Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted accomplice of deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, is signaling a willingness to testify before Congress about her role in Epstein’s network — so long as House Republicans meet a list of extraordinary conditions first.
Ghislaine Maxwell's attorneys sent a letter to the House Oversight Committee, informing the body that she would only testify if granted immunity.
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Does she have information that could potentially help? Yes. Will she be truthful about it? Who knows,” lawyer Bradley Edwards told MSNBC.