Ex-Epstein staffer testifies underage girls visited mansion

NEW YORK (AP) — A former housekeeper testified Thursday that two women who have accused Jeffrey Epstein of sexually abusing them as underage teens were repeated visitors to his Palm Beach mansion, summoned by Epstein or his associate Ghislaine Maxwell. 

In his first hours on the stand at Maxwell's sex trafficking trial, Juan Patricio Alessi said that one of her accusers, who testified under the pseudonym “Jane” earlier this week, initially visited the house with her mother but later returned several times alone. She went to the movies and once took a plane trip with Epstein, Maxwell and their guests, Alessi said.

He said another of Epstein's accusers, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, visited “very often" and also took a plane trip. 

Alessi said he sometimes picked up Giuffre or “Jane” from their homes, on instructions from Maxwell or Epstein, and would bring the visitors — whom he took to be 14 or 15 years old — to Maxwell at her desk. 

After that, it was “not my job to see where they were,” he said. 

One time, Giuffre brought her boyfriend into the house with her, he said, and Maxwell said the man needed to leave and wait in the car.

Alessi said he saw also “many, many, many” young adult female visitors, often lounging topless by the pool, during a dozen years of working at Epstein’s sprawling home. Alessi said they appeared to be in their late 20s.

Epstein killed himself in jail in 2019, while charged with sex trafficking counts that alleged he abused dozens of underage girls in New York and Florida. Thecase against Maxwellstems from four now-adult women who said she helped him victimize them.

Giuffre's allegations, which include claims that Epstein trafficked her to other prominent men who have denied it, are not part of the case.

Maxwell, 59, denies the allegations against her, and her lawyers say prosecutors are going after her because they can’t try Epstein.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they decide to tell their stories publicly, as Giuffre has done.

Maxwell, a British socialite, was Epstein’s onetime girlfriend and, later, employee. Prosecutors said she took the girls on shopping trips and movie outings, talked to them about their lives and encouraged them to accept financial help from him.

The government also says she also helped to create a sexualized atmosphere by talking with the girls about sex and encouraging them to give Epstein massages, and the woman identified as “Jane” testified this week that she had sexual interactions with Epstein at age 14 with Maxwell in the room and sometimes participating. Maxwell’s lawyers pointed to FBI documents that said she gave the government a different account in 2019; she questioned the documents’ accuracy. 

Alessi portrayed an imperious Maxwell letting it be known that she should be treated as “the lady of the house” and handing out a 58-page booklet with rules for staff on everything from how to address the pair to how to dress to what types of notepads to put on their desks.

“Checklists will assist you in making sure every task has been completed and not even the smallest detail has been overlooked,” the book said, instructing employees to “try to anticipate” Epstein and Maxwell's needs and to “hear nothing, say nothing” except when spoken to. 

“I was supposed to be blind, deaf and dumb and say nothing of their lives," Alessi said.

Staffers had to “run the house like a five-star hotel,” keep Epstein’s cars washed and stocked with $100 bills in them for his weekend visits — and weren’t supposed to look him in the eye. Maxwell said he didn’t like such eye contact, according to Alessi, who said he began working at the house as a renovation subcontractor and eventually managed it. He left in 2002.

Earlier Thursday, psychologist Lisa Rocchio testified that child sexual abusers often groom their victims in a progression that includes giving presents, building a sense of trust and gradually introducing more sexualized talk and touching. Victims often don't come forward right away, she said.

Before the trial, Maxwell's lawyers tried unsuccessfully to block Rocchio's testimony, saying it didn't have enough scientific grounding. 

After she took the stand, defense lawyer Jeffrey Pagliuca suggested that some things she described as grooming — such as giving gifts, taking children to special places or paying them attention — could also be innocuous. 

He recalled, for example, his grandfather taking him to the Bronx Zoo as a child.

“I'm assuming he wasn’t taking you there for sexual abuse,” Rocchio retorted. 

Simply being nice to someone isn't grooming, she said, “in the context of a healthy and normal relationship.”

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