Objections Abound During Day Four of Ghislaine Maxwell Trial
December 2, 2021
Second half of day.... 1/2
The prosecution’s final witness of the day was Juan P. Alessi, who first started working for Epstein as a subcontractor at his Palm Beach, Florida, residence in 1990.
In 1991, he was hired full-time. He testified his job responsibilities “changed gradually over the years.” Ultimately, he oversaw much of the Palm Beach staff, including cleaners, maintenance, and gardening.
His wife was also employed by Epstein.
Alessi testified that he reported directly to the defendant, Ghislaine Maxwell.
Just as the prosecution did with Epstein’s pilot, Lawrence P. Visoski, Jr., who testified earlier this week, attorney Maurene Comey spent a lot of time having Alessi describe each room in the house, even going over diagrams of the interior and exterior.
Alessi testified there were “many, many, many females” he saw “hundreds of times” by the pool, and 75-80 percent of them were topless. They interacted with Maxwell.
After several years on the job, said Alessi, he and his staff were required to perform “extensive preparation,” of the house, sometimes with only a few hours’ notice.
Alessi said he was given “a tremendous amount of instruction” from Maxwell, which was mostly verbal. However, in 2001 or 2002, he received a printed booklet, entitled “Household Manual.”
He stated it included 30, or more, pages of checklists for proper presentation of the house.
Alessi reviewed the booklet while on the witness stand. Since the edition of the manual was dated after he had left the job, he went through it, page by page, stating which pages, or portion of pages, he recognized.
He recognized a majority of the booklet.
During cross-examination, Pagliuca argued since Alessi had left Epstein’s employment after this booklet was printed, this edition was not the one submitted as evidence.
Alessi discarded his copy after his employment ended in 2002.
Under redirect, Comey went over specific entries in the manual.
They included, “Do not discuss personal problems with guests,” “Remember that you see nothing, hear nothing, say nothing except to answer a question directed to you,” and “NEVER [in both bold and uppercase] discuss Mr. Epstein’s, or Ms. Maxwell’s, activities or whereabouts. Respect their privacy.”
Alessi testified that he saw what appeared to be two underage girls at the Palm Beach residence. One he remembered as Jane, and the other as Virginia Roberts.
He estimated both their ages as 14 or 15.
He met Jane in 1994 and saw her at the house with her mother at least three times, but then without her mother four or five times.
Since Alessi also worked as a driver, he had driven Epstein, Maxwell, Jane and Maxwell’s yorkie, Max, to the airport and witnessed all of them boarding the plane.
He related the same story with Roberts.
Comey presented Alessi with one of the several address books—referred to as “directories”—which Epstein and Maxwell used regularly.
Alessi reviewed it Wednesday night.
He believed it was from after his employment, because his name wasn’t in it, and it was thinner, and with a smaller font than the ones he remembered.
Alessi identified Jane’s real name and contact information in it.
Pagliuca asked Alessi to take note of the boxes, circles, and arrows that were handwritten in the directory, as well as the Post-It notes protruding from the pages.
Alessi confirmed he did not know who wrote the notations, or added the Post-Its.
Pagliuca hypothesized that someone could have photocopied an original directory, bound the pages, possibly removing some, and that Alessi has no personal knowledge of how it was produced and kept for the past 19 years.
Comey had Alessi review a phone message book, which kept a carbon copy of each handwritten message. Alessi was often the one who answered the phone.
Alessi stated which messages were in his handwriting, which were in his wife’s and which were unknown to him.
Once again, dates of some messages were after Alessi’s employment.
Pagliuca argued no one knew where the completed books went after they were placed in a closet and objected to the evidence being admitted, because the handwritings weren’t authenticated.
The evidence was admitted.
Since it was not ready for viewing, the prosecution will circle back to it when it is.