Ghislaine Maxwell’s unexpected arrival at a cushy Texas prison this August has left different inmates unsettled, with some claiming it appears that evidently she receives preferential therapy, in keeping with a report.
Maxwell’s arrival at Bryan Federal Jail Camp, a minimum-security facility identified for its comparatively relaxed atmosphere, has drastically disrupted the every day lives of her fellow inmates, The Wall Street Journal reports.
On a weekend in mid-August, not lengthy after her arrival, inmates on the jail had been pressured to remain indoors throughout their typical outside time as Maxwell met with a number of guests within the jail camp’s chapel, individuals conversant in the matter instructed The Journal.
The arrival of the 63-year-old former affiliate of Jeffrey Epstein, convicted of trafficking underage women for the deceased financier, has led to extra frequent lockdowns, extra armed guards on campus and different modifications on the jail, in keeping with the report.
Present and former inmates on the often docile jail — additionally the house of Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes and Actual Housewives of Salt Lake Metropolis star Jen Shah — mentioned it appeared that Maxwell has been receiving higher therapy than different inmates.

A majority of the inmates held there have dedicated white-collar crimes and face shorter sentences, or have served a bigger portion of an extended sentence and are thought of a low flight threat.
Due to this, Federal Jail Camp Bryan is called being comparatively low-security, with none towering fences, barbed wire or high-security cells discovered at extra strict amenities.
The Bureau of Prisons usually prohibits sex offenders from serving time in such prisons, although they are often admitted with a particular waiver, in keeping with the report. Maxwell, who was handed down a 20-year sentence in 2022, has the fourth-longest remaining sentence out of the jail’s 600 inmates.
It was not identified who Maxwell met with within the chapel that day, although a few of her fellow inmates heard rumors that the lockdown was meant to accommodate vital guests, in keeping with the report.
Later that day, one inmate mentioned they noticed Maxwell return to her dormitory with a smile on her face. When requested about her mysterious assembly, Maxwell mentioned it went properly, however didn’t share every other data, in keeping with the report.
In the meantime, lower than per week later, the Justice Department launched a transcript of an interview Maxwell had with senior official Todd Blanche weeks earlier in July.
In the course of the interview with Blanche, Maxwell mentioned she had by no means seen President Donald Trump doing something inappropriate or unlawful with Epstein after they had been pals. Quickly after, she was transferred to Federal Jail Camp Bryan.

On the time, Maxwell’s lawyer, David Markus, wrote on X that the switch was for security causes and got here after she “confronted critical hazard in Tallahassee.” It was not instantly clear what sorts of security considerations she had confronted on the higher-security jail.
Along with inflicting some minor inconveniences for the opposite inmates, Maxwell was additionally greeted with a wave of hostility from some. In accordance with the report, fellow prisoners taunted her, calling her a pedophile and a “chomo” – a jail slur for baby molester.
Throughout one incident, Maxwell had politely requested an inmate to depart her room, prompting the opposite girl to start screaming at Maxwell that she didn’t belong there. The inmate was then transferred to a different dormitory, the report says.
Quickly after, the warden organized a “city corridor” and warned that if inmates made threats to Maxwell, put her in peril or talked to the press about her, they’d be taken to a harsher facility, sources instructed The Journal.
In the meantime, inmates instructed The Journal that Maxwell principally stored to herself, particularly as there was a media frenzy quickly after her switch. Nonetheless, she reportedly obtained preferential therapy, as guards would carry her meals to her dormitory or escort her to the recreation space for late-night exercises. Maxwell was additionally allowed to bathe after different inmates had been confined to their bunks, in keeping with the report.
Quickly after her arrival, the jail additionally stationed armed particular operations response groups, often known as SORT, on the camp’s entrance and rear gate, and stored them there across the clock.
In accordance with the inmates, as soon as jail officers added a black tarp to dam the view out of the camp, Maxwell went exterior extra.

With that addition, she additionally started getting her hair reduce and coloured on the prison-run salon, and visiting the cafeteria, although she would give away her vegetarian meals, claiming she couldn’t eat the meals, one inmate instructed The Journal.
Her lawyer, Markus, declined to touch upon the report back to the Journal. A spokesperson for the Justice Division, which oversees the Bureau of Prisons, additionally declined to remark.
Information of Maxwell’s mysterious assembly comes because the Supreme Courtroom on Monday denied her appeal after asking the nation’s highest court to review her case.
After the ruling, Trump was requested if he would contemplate pardoning Maxwell, to which he replied: “I’d have to check out it.”
He then mentioned he must “communicate to the DOJ” and burdened that he didn’t know “something” concerning the matter, regardless of the case dominating headlines for months after a bipartisan effort to drive the discharge of case information from the Justice Division’s try to prosecute Epstein.