Ghislaine Maxwell, convicted sex trafficker and longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, has been moved under extraordinary protection after receiving multiple death threats following her surprise transfer to a minimum-security federal prison camp in Bryan, Texas.

According to The New York Sun, federal corrections officials have called in elite units — the Bureau of Prisons’ Special Operations Response Team (SORT) and Counter Terrorism Unit (CTU) — to secure the facility inside and out. SORT officers have been stationed at the prison’s entrance and perimeter to guard against external threats, while CTU specialists are monitoring inmate communications for potential dangers from within.

“Members of the BOP’s Special Operations Response Team have been working around the Federal Prison Camp Bryan’s entrance and perimeter to monitor outside threats against Maxwell,” the Sun reported. “The French and British socialite is serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking and is trying to negotiate a commutation of her sentence amid enormous, renewed public interest in the Epstein case that has put pressure on President Trump.”

“The BOP has also deployed its Counter Terrorism Unit, typically used to monitor the communications and activities for ‘terrorist offenders’ incarcerated in its system, to monitor threats inside Camp Bryan,” the report added. “Both teams have been working inside Camp Bryan since Maxwell’s transfer there last week.”

A source told the Sun the threats are “focused on the outside looking in, as opposed to the happenings inside the camp.” Both teams have been operating on site since Maxwell’s arrival last week.

Maxwell, a French-British socialite, is serving a 20-year sentence for trafficking underage girls for Epstein. She is reportedly seeking a commutation and cooperating with authorities — a move that has reignited public interest in the Epstein case and stirred fresh political pressure, particularly toward former President Trump.

The Bureau of Prisons declined to confirm the security measures, citing policy against commenting on individual inmates or operational details. “We take seriously our duty to protect the individuals entrusted in our custody, as well as maintaining the safety of our employees and the community,” a spokesperson said.

While the BOP routinely handles America’s most dangerous and high-profile inmates, including those at the nation’s supermax facility in Colorado, such heightened protection is rare for a minimum-security camp. Until Maxwell’s arrival, its most famous inmates were reality TV star Jen Shah and Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes.

Her transfer to Bryan — and her willingness to assist in ongoing investigations into Epstein’s network — has angered many of her victims, who view the move as a step toward leniency rather than justice.

However, there are others who are concerned about justice for the clients that Jeffrey Epstein targeted and potentially compromised in a blackmail ring. What the intelligence agencies knew about his operation — and what they know to this day — is still a matter of utmost importance to the American people.

Adding to the intrigue, a federal judge has refused to unseal grand jury documents related to the case.

“A federal judge in Manhattan on Monday rejected the Trump administration’s request to release grand jury transcripts from the Justice Department investigation into convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime confidant Ghislaine Maxwell,” NPR reported.

“The department asked the court last month to unseal the grand jury transcripts, which are generally secret, saying there was ‘abundant public interest’ in the case.,” the report added. “The unusual request was part of the administration’s effort to tamp down the intense public blowback over its handling of the Epstein files.”

“But on Monday, U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer said that there were no special circumstances to justify releasing the transcripts in Maxwell’s case,” the report continued.

“Its entire premise — that the Maxwell grand jury materials would bring to light meaningful new information about Epstein’s and Maxwell’s crimes, or the Government’s investigation into them — is demonstrably false,” Engelmayer wrote. “There is no there there,” he added.

That is up to the American people to decide, and not a federal judge.

By Star

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