Final accuser takes stand at Maxwell trial, using real name
NEW YORK (AP) — Another key accuser at the sex-abuse trial of Ghislaine Maxwell began testifying Friday about her allegations that the British socialite tried to coax her — at just 16 — into a sexual encounter with financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Annie Farmer took the stand using her true identity — a departure from the decision by three other accusers with similar stories who testified under pseudonyms or first names only to protect their privacy.
Asked by a prosecutor if she saw anyone in the courtroom who had ever given her a massage, she identified Maxwell, who was sitting at the defense table.
Farmer’s testimony was originally expected on Thursday at Maxwell’s closely watched trial in federal court in Manhattan. But it was delayed after U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan announced that one of the attorneys in the case was sick, adjourning the case for the day.