
Victim or enabler? Epstein girlfriend who could face questions despite plea deal
Victim or enabler? Epstein girlfriend who could face questions despite plea deal32 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleTim WhewellandJakub Pohle , NewsGetty ImagesNadia Marcinko was Epstein's main...
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Key developments are emerging from the global stage. Epstein girlfriend who could face questions despite plea deal32 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on GoogleTim WhewellandJakub Pohle , NewsGetty ImagesNadia Marcinko was Epstein's main girlfriend for seven years, after his relationship with Ghislaine Maxwell came to an endDuring Jeffrey Epstein's first spell in jail, a 13-month sentence for soliciting sex from an under-age girl, prison records show one woman visited him at least 67 times. That woman was Nadia Marcinko. Marcinko was Epstein's main girlfriend for seven years - his most significant partner after Ghislaine Maxwell - and in later years, an assistant pilot of his private plane.
She is comparatively unknown to the public, but she may soon find herself in the spotlight. Marcinko is one of four women who were named as Epstein's "potential co-conspirators" in a 2008 plea deal that granted them immunity from prosecution. Now, two of those women - Epstein assistants Sarah Kellen and Lesley Groff - are about to be questioned by US legislators.
The Details
One congresswoman wants all four, including Adriana Ross, another Epstein assistant, and Marcinko, to be investigated, despite the plea deal. Marcinko has never been accused of, or charged with, any crime. Her lawyers say she is one of Epstein's victims.
But girls in Palm Beach, Florida, whose testimony about their abuse when they were under age led to Epstein's conviction in 2008, told police that Marcinko participated in that abuse. The has spent months interviewing those who have met Marcinko, and scrutinising every email we could find between her and Epstein in the files, to try and build a detailed picture of her role in the disgraced financier's life. The emails reveal Epstein and Marcinko wanted to start a family together, we have discovered.
The has also found evidence suggesting that over many years, he asked her to recruit other women to help satisfy his sexual desires and she complied. But the emails also expose deeply coercive tendencies on the part of Epstein. Marcinko later told investigators that he was physically violent, choking her, and throwing her down a flight of stairs.
What Experts Say
We have had access to her account to investigators via a document that was released - heavily redacted - by the US Department of Justice in January. Marcinko's name is not visible, but the five pages of testimony match in every detail what we know about her from other sources. The contacted Marcinko for comment, but she did not reply.
Since Epstein's death in prison in 2019, awaiting further sex charges, she has disappeared from public view. The calls for an investigation into Marcinko have raised important questions about whether a victim of sexual coercion can also be deemed an accomplice. Marcinko was described by one of her classmates as very shyMarcinko was born Nadia Marcinkova into a comfortably-off, respected family in Slovakia.
The development has drawn wide international attention, with diplomatic circles watching closely.





