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Case 20-3061, Document 69, 09/28/2020, 2940206, Page11 of 15
District Court in the criminal case.” Doc. 37, p 17 (emphasis in original). That is
not so.
In the civil appeal, Ms. Maxwell is not asking this Court to rule on the
propriety of the government’s conduct in circumventing Martindell. Rather, Ms.
Maxwell’s argument in the civil appeal is that, unless this Court reverses Judge
Preska’s order unsealing the deposition material, Ms. Maxwell may never be able to
challenge before Judge Nathan the government’s conduct in obtaining her
depositions. As Ms. Maxwell said in her opening brief in the appeal of Judge
Preska’s unsealing order:
The civil case is not the appropriate forum to litigate the
government’s apparent violation of Martindell. Ms. Maxwell intends
to make that argument to Judge Nathan in the criminal case. But if
Judge Preska’s unsealing order is affirmed and Ms. Maxwell’s
deposition is released, her ability to make that argument before Judge
Nathan will be prejudiced. Keeping the deposition material sealed will
preserve the status quo and protect Ms. Maxwell’s right to litigate
Martindell and the Fifth Amendment in the criminal proceeding.
Giuffre v. Maxwell, No. 20-2413, ECF Dkt. 69, p 33. Only by mischaracterizing
Ms. Maxwell’s argument can the government contend that she “seeks to have this
Court reach the merits of her arguments on [the Martindell] issue in the context of
the civil appeal, and before they have been properly litigated before and adjudicated
by the District Court in the criminal case.” See Doc. 37, p 17. Ms. Maxwell’s point
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Extracted Information
Dates
Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00019602.jpg |
| File Size | 705.5 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 94.9% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,618 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 19:45:23.952823 |