EFTA00021015.pdf
efta-20251231-dataset-8 Court Filing 215.0 KB • Feb 13, 2026
LAW OFFICES OF BOBBI C.STERNHEIM
212-243-1100 •
Moln
917-306-6666 • Cell
888-587-4737 •
Fax
Honorable Alison J. Nathan
United States District Judge
United States
Courthouse
40 Foley Square
New York, NY 10007
Dear Judge Nathan:
33 West 19th
Street - 4th Floor
New York, New York 10011
bc@sternhelmlow.com
February I, 2021
Re. United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell
20 Cr.
330 (MN)
By letter to the Court, dated January 25, 2021 (Dkt.117 at 2-3), the MDC raised objection
to the Court's order, unopposed by the government, directing the MDC to permit Ms. Maxwell to
use on a laptop computer on weekends and holidays. (Dkt. 116 at 2). The MDC has failed to
state a valid or compelling reason for opposing the Court's directive.
The MDC does not identify any valid reason why Ms. Maxwell cannot have access to the
laptop computer on weekends and holidays. The MDC does not argue, for example, that access
to the laptop cannot be provided because of issues related to safety or security, staffing, or (to
quote the government) the need to "manag[e] its inmate population." Instead, in opposition to
the Court's order, the MDC repeats its stock response: Ms. Maxwell has received significant
amount of time to review her discovery and has more contact with counsel than any other MDC
inmate is allotted. The MDC's fixation on the relative time Ms. Maxwell has been given to
review discovery is totally misguided. The government has produced millions of pages of
discovery. Ms. Maxwell has the right to review all of them in order to prepare her defense for
trial. To do that, she needs access to the laptop for as much time as possible, including the
weekends and holidays because the prison computers are incapable of reading the millions of
discovery documents. Ms. Maxwell loses 10 or more hours per week due to delay in receiving
the laptop, problems caused by the MDC computer, and inability to access the computer during
morning and afternoon counts on the weekends. Comparing Ms. Maxwell to other inmates does
not justify restricting her use of the laptop to review discovery.
The MDC's proposed solution—that Ms. Maxwell can simply use the prison computer on
the weekends and holidays to review discovery—is utterly inadequate. As Ms. Maxwell has
pointed out on many occasions, the prison computer is incapable of reading a significant portion
of the discovery, including but not limited to native files, Excel files, some video and audio files,
and anything requiring Cellebrite software. The MDC concedes this fact in their letter—Ms.
Maxwell cannot review all of her discovery on the prison computer. And using it causes a
colossal waste of time. For example, if Ms. Maxwell locates a document on the prison computer
EFTA00021015
LAW OFFICES OF BOB0I C. STERNHEIM
for which she needs to review the native image, many of which are embedded in other files, she
must write down the Bates number for that document and then wait until Monday to find the
same document using the laptop computer so that she can review the full document. Moreover,
the MDC computer shuts down every two hours, requiring Ms. Maxwell to reboot the computer
and find her place in the documents to resume her review. This process can take 20-30 minutes,
all of which is lost time. In addition, the power of central processing unit of the MDC computer
is very slow. Uploading videos can take up to a half hour, time that cannot be used to review
other documents. When the computer automatically shuts down, videos need to be re-opened,
requiring Ms. Maxwell to locate the portion of the video she was viewing when the computer
shut down. In sum, using the prison computer is a problem, not a solution.
Ms. Maxwell's review of discovery is challenging enough on the laptop computer that
was provided. Even with the laptop, Ms. Maxwell is unable to search, unable to print, and
unable to tag or highlight documents for later review. She must review millions of pages of
unwieldy documents produced in various formats (native, image, text) one page at a time—with
no filtering or organizing—and record millions of Bates numbers and notes of her review by
hand on the limited amount of paper she is provided. And she is not permitted to have any
supplies to organize the voluminous legal papers. Hard drives provided by the government have
been mishandled by MDC staff (dropped on the floor and slammed on a cart) causing them to
become degraded and unstable and to randomly shut down. While the laptop does not solve all of
these issues, it performs far better than the MDC computers. The time, resources and funds
expended on problems caused by the electronic discovery and the computers is unnecessary,
wasteful, and frustrating. The MDC is in no position - and is neither qualified nor experienced -
to
challenge Ms. Maxwell's and her counsel's claim that she needs access to the laptop on the
weekends and holidays to even hope to finish reviewing the millions of pages of documents
produced in discovery.
The MDC's assertion that Ms. Maxwell's access to her attorneys is a reason to deny her
access to the laptop computer on weekend and holidays is non-sensical. One has absolutely
nothing to do with the other. And it ignores the fact that, aside from time to review discovery or
communicate with counsel, Ms. Maxwell is far more restricted than all other MDC inmates.
Other inmates have unlimited time to communicate with other inmates. With exception of
inmates detained in the SHU for disciplinary reasons, all other MDC inmates have unlimited
time to interact with other inmates. Other than calls with family or communication with counsel,
Ms. Maxwell has no human contact except with guards who wield power over her, overmanage
her, and have psychologically and physically abused her. And complaints regarding
mistreatment by guards have led to reprisals against Ms. Maxwell.
Rather than state a valid reason for opposing the Court's directive, the MDC's opposition
shines a klieg light on the deficiencies of its electronics and the limitations imposed on all
inmates, most especially those detained pretrial. The restrictions placed on pretrial detainees goes
beyond deprivation of liberty. Their ability to prepare for trial is compromised, their access to
counsel is restricted, and their right to effective assistance of counsel is jeopardized. The
pandemic has made the situation even more dire. Requiring pretrial detainees, including Ms.
Maxwell, to review terabytes of electronic discovery on inadequate computers further tips an
already unlevel playing field to the detriment of criminal defendants.
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LAW OFFICES OF 13013131 C. STERNHEIM
There are no reasonable conditions to assure that as a pretrial detainee Ms. Maxwell will
be as prepared for trial as a defendant on bail. Permitting Ms. Maxwell to use the laptop on
weekends and holidays is a reasonable and minimum accommodation for the difficulties entailed
in reviewing enormous amounts of electronic discovery, and one that imposes no burden on the
BOP nor any security issues. The Court's order directing the MDC to permit Ms. Maxwell
access to the computer on weekends and holidays should remain in effect.
Very truly yours,
gotez C.
9,444.440.
BOBBI C. STERNHEIM
cc: Sophia Papapetru, MDC counsel
Government Counsel
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