• Jurors consider evidence in Briton’s sex-trafficking trial
  • Maxwell, who has pleaded not guilty, tried on six counts
Judge Alison Nathan, who is presiding over Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial
Photograph: Elizabeth Williams/AP

Jury deliberations will resume on Monday morning in Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex-trafficking trial in federal court in Manhattan.

The trial began in earnest on 29 November. Maxwell, 60, is being tried on six counts for alleged involvement in her ex-boyfriend Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse of girls, some as young as 14. Maxwell has pleaded not guilty.

Epstein, a financier and convicted sex offender whose associates included Prince Andrew, Donald Trump and Bill Clinton, was arrested in July 2019 for sex trafficking girls. He killed himself in a Manhattan federal jail, where he was awaiting his own trial, about a month after his arrest.

Deliberations in Maxwell’s trial began last Monday, before a break for Christmas. On Monday morning, a week after the conclusion of closing arguments, members of the media resumed their long – and cold – vigil outside the courthouse in lower Manhattan.

The atmosphere was somewhat deflated, amid speculation that some jurors might return to the court Covid-positive, as the Omicron variant surges through the city.

It appeared the jurors avoided infection. Just before 10.30am, the panel sent the court a note. It requested a variety of office supplies, including “different color Post-its”, white poster board and highlighters in different colors.

The jurors also asked to see testimony from Matt, the former boyfriend of Jane, the first Maxwell accuser to testify at trial, and asked for a definition of “enticement”. Maxwell is accused of luring minors into Epstein’s orbit.

The judge, Alison Nathan, said she would point the jurors to her instructions, and said she would tell them “entice means to attract, induce, or lure using hope or desire”.

Just after 11am, jurors sent another note, requesting testimony from Gregory Parkinson, a former police officer who led a search of Epstein’s property in Palm Beach, Florida, in October 2005. During his testimony, on 3 December, Parkinson walked jurors through a video of this search and answered questions about still images presented onscreen.

“Mr Parkinson, what is the green object?” the prosecution asked, in reference to one image.

“That is a portable, collapsable massage table,” Parkinson said.

During Parkinson’s testimony, the prosecution asked Judge Nathan for permission to take government exhibit 51 into the courtroom. A detective then walked in, carrying a folded massage table.

Parkinson got down from the witness stand, put on a pair of gloves and looked at the table while it was in its folded position. He returned to the witness stand. The detective who brought the massage table into court opened it. Parkinson was asked to describe what he saw.

“The table itself in an open position,” he said.

On Monday morning, Maxwell seemed to be in good spirits. When she walked into the courtroom moments before 10.30am, sporting a camel turtleneck and black pants, she hugged each of her lawyers.

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