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Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein's alleged madam, lived in a $5 million NYC mansion with ties to Epstein and ran a mysterious private foundation. Here's what we know about the British socialite's finances and assets.
Ghislaine Maxwell, Jeffrey Epstein's alleged madam, lived in a $5 million NYC mansion with ties to Epstein and ran a mysterious private foundation. Here's what we know about the British socialite's finances and assets.
According to alleged victims, Maxwell acted as Epstein's madam; she's accused of recruiting victims and abusing them alongside the convicted sex offender.
British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell has become one of the most prominent and mysterious figures linked to late financier Jeffrey Epstein, who died by apparent suicide on August 10 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking and conspiracy charges.
According to alleged victims,Maxwell acted as Epstein's madam, recruiting and abusing underage victims alongside the convicted sex offender. Maxwell has denied these allegations.
Maxwell's legal team is out of the country and unavailable for comment, according to the law office. The firm did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.
Born in France, Maxwell is the daughter of British media mogul Robert Maxwell, who mysteriously drowned after falling or jumping from his yacht near the Canary Islands in 1991.
British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell has become one of the most prominent and mysterious figures linked to late financier Jeffrey Epstein, who died by apparent suicide in a Manhattan jail on August 10.
After Robert Maxwell's death, his yacht was sold to an American buyer and is now known as Lady Mona K. The 190-foot-yacht sleeps up to 12 guests in six cabins.
Maxwell moved to the US in 1991, living off a $100,000-a-year trust fund set up by her father.
The British socialite, about 30 years old at the time, quickly became a staple of the city's high society, rubbing shoulders with celebrities, presidents, CEOs, and other members of the city's wealthy and powerful elite.
According to a 2000 article by The New York Post, she started out in New York working in real estate and living off about $100,000 a year from a trust fund set up by her father.
Soon after she moved to New York, Maxwell reportedly began a relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
Maxwell reportedly introduced Epstein to Bill and Hillary Clinton, who she knew through their daughter, Chelsea, according to Politico. Maxwell was a guest at Chelsea Clinton's wedding in July 2010.
"Ghislaine was the contact between Epstein and Clinton," a person familiar with the relationship told Politico. "She ended up being close to the family because she and Chelsea ended up becoming close."
When reached for comment by Business Insider, Bari Lurie, Chelsea's chief of staff, said Chelsea and her husband, Marc Mezvinsky, were not aware of the allegations against Maxwell until 2015.
"Chelsea and Marc were friendly with her because of her relationship with a dear friend of theirs," Lurie told Business Insider. "When that relationship ended, Chelsea and Marc's friendship with her ended as well."
A person close to Chelsea told Business Insider that Chelsea and her husband knew Maxwell through a close family friend, Ted Waitt, and that Chelsea and Maxwell were never "close."
Maxwell was only at Chelsea's wedding because she was Waitt's girlfriend at the time, the person said.
Until 2016, Maxwell lived in a $5 million New York townhouse bought by a company with the same address as Epstein's business office.
Tax records reviewed by Business Insider show the Manhattan townhouse was purchased for $4.95 million in October 2000 by an anonymous corporation with the same address as Epstein's finance office on Madison Avenue.
Forester sold the mansion for about $8.5 million less than its assessed market value, which was more than $13.4 million. Forester bought the home in 1997 for $4.475 million, according to tax documents.
Days after Epstein was arrested on sex trafficking charges, the organization's website was shut down and now includes only a statement announcing its closure: "The TerraMar Project is sad to announce that it will cease all operations. The website will be closed. ... TerraMar wants to thank all its supporters, partners and fellow ocean lovers."
Business Insider's Áine Cain reviewed the non-profit's tax documents and found that the nonprofit was a relatively small enterprise. No employee was ever paid more than $100,000, and most of its funds went into website development, office expenses, travel, phone and utilities fees, merchant fees, contractor fees, professional fundraising services, and insurance policies.
Through a private foundation, Maxwell has donated to various charitable organizations — including a charity for sex trafficking victims.
According to tax filings published by ProPublica and reviewed by Business Insider, Maxwell is the trustee of a philanthropic organization called Max Foundation Tr.
When reached by email, GEMS founder and CEO Rachel Lloyd told Business Insider they could not find a record of the donation, noting that it was for less than $500 and that they had changed donor databases since 2008.
"We would never knowingly accept monies from anyone who was working against [our] mission," Lloyd said. "We fully support all the victims who have been brave enough to come forward against Jeffrey Epstein and hope that they will still be able to find a measure of justice from those [who] perpetuated his crimes."
Maxwell's other donations through her foundation include $275 in 2011 to the Madison Square Boys & Girls Club, a chapter of Boys & Girls Clubs of America that provides after-school programs for under-resourced youth in New York City; and in 2007, $300 to Hale House, a New York charity that took in homeless infants and toddlers. In 2008, Hale House ended its residential program and became a daycare service known as the Mother Hale Learning Center.
The tax filings also show that Maxwell donated $2,500 to the Clinton Library and Foundation in 2003, as well as at least $1,625 between 2003 and 2008 to the Wayuu Taya Foundation, a nonprofit focused on improving the lives of Latin American indigenous communities.
According to tax filings, between 2002 and 2018, Maxwell's foundation held an average of about $20,000 in total assets each year and appeared to be used to make a few small donations per year, possibly to purchase tickets to some of the fundraisers and charity galas at which she was often photographed.
Maxwell's current whereabouts are unknown and authorities have had trouble locating her, The Washington Post reported.
The Washington Post reported on August 11 that Maxwell is believed to be living abroad and authorities have not been able to locate her.
According to a Daily Mail report from August 14, Maxwell has been living in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, with tech CEO Scott Borgerson. However, when contacted by Business Insider, Borgerson denied that Maxwell is currently staying at his house. He said that he has been out of the country traveling for work for the past week and that the house has been empty.
Maxwell's legal team did not respond to a Business Insider request for comment on her current location.