As the 'Daily Mail' claims to share new 'bombshell' revelations suggesting Ghislaine Maxwell herself a victim of abuse, we remind them that this story is ...
A graduate of the London School of Economics, Matthew Steeples is a writer and marketing consultant. Though some have lauded the now convicted sex offender’s mother as a “good woman,” others have argued that she had an equally wicked and warped sense of morals to her clearly completely lacking in a moral compass husband. In school mistress like fashion, the current host of Countdown remarked in June 2021: “She had a horrendous childhood, she lacked goals.” At that time, Ghislaine Maxwell could have decided to make up for what had gone wrong in her world. After ‘dodgy daddy’ died by means foul or fouler depending on who you’d believe on his yacht in 1991, this wicked wastrel had a choice. Clearly, Mr Robinson was fed the uber connected Lady Evans’ publisher’s press release about her no doubt very heavily promoted tome.
The 'big takeaway' from this BBC documentary is that the Maxwells were 'bonkers'
The result is shallow and “hopelessly muddled”. The show goes over some familiar ground, said Hannah Jane Parkinson in The Observer – Maxwell’s “competitive obsession with Rupert Murdoch” is well-documented, for instance – but there are plenty of interesting moments. The film tries to “join the dots” between his life and that of his favourite daughter, Ghislaine, who was last year found guilty on sex-trafficking charges.
Ghislaine Maxwell suffered "sadistic" beatings at the hands of her publishing mogul father, a new book claims.
At the heart of Epstein’s scheme was Maxwell who made the young women and girls “feel safe”. But he always allows me to choose which one I want.” Article content