From flashing light in eyes to clanging keys every night, Florida prison guards give ‘entitled’ Ghislaine Maxwell a hard time
TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA: Convicted criminal Ghislaine Maxwell is not having an ‘easy’ time at a federal prison in Tallahassee, Florida. Sentenced to 20 years behind the bars for her involvement in recruiting and trafficking underage girls for pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced socialite is allegedly being ‘screwed’ by the prison guards. As per an inside source, Maxell has been subjected to ‘harsher treatment,’ which includes flashing a light in her eyes at night, ‘clanging their keys, and talking about her loudly in unflattering terms.'
The 61-year-old convict had earlier complained about similar action by prison guards, alleging a light is shone at her every 15 minutes when she was awaiting her trial at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York. Holli Coulman, a founder of prison consultancy company Pink Lady Consultants, told DailyMail, guards are 'not easy' on Maxwell during their routine patrols because of her 'entitled attitude.' She said that Maxwell mostly interacts with a limited number of inmates. “She rarely associates out of that group. I am told that the guards like screwing with her by shining their lights at night, clanging their keys, and talking really loud and derogatory at her.”
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'I know that the guards at night are not easy on her'
Maxwell keeps close to her pod mates where the pod means a group of cells clustered together separately from the rest of the prison wall, and has their own common area. “I know that the guards at night are not easy on her when they come by her bunk and check that she's there,” she added. Coulman has several other clients who are serving time inside the same prison. “They don't like her because of her entitled attitude. I'm sure it's something she can't change as she has a different demeanor than let's say an inmate serving time for drugs. Her upbringing was upper class.”
Maxwell to file fresh appeal in court soon
The Bureau of Prisons has refused to make a particular remark on Maxwell’s case. A spokesman stated in the Correctional Services Procedures Manual, “When counting at night, a flashlight must be used judiciously; however, enough light will be shown on the inmate to leave no doubt the officer is counting human flesh.” Maxwell had spent two years now at the Brooklyn prison, and her attorneys have complained that she was ‘withering to shell of her former self,’ also losing her hair and was even forced to scrub shower walls after she complained about her mistreatment.The disgraced socialite is set to file a fresh appeal and is now being represented by Arthur Aidala, whose client includes disgraced Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein.