
Trump Admin. Has Up to 120,000 Pages of Documents on Ghislaine Maxwell’s Prison Transfer – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Pexels)
Federal prison officials have disclosed an unexpectedly large collection of internal documents tied to Ghislaine Maxwell’s move last year from a medium-security facility to the minimum-security camp in Bryan, Texas. The revelation came in a recent court filing as part of a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit brought by the Center for Investigative Reporting. No official explanation has ever been offered for the transfer, which placed the convicted sex-trafficker among nonviolent offenders in a setting that offers yoga classes and a puppy program.
The Unexplained Relocation
Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year sentence for procuring minors for Jeffrey Epstein, was moved after a lengthy interview with then-Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche. During that session she spoke favorably of President Trump and stated she had never seen him engage in misconduct. The shift to Bryan occurred without public notice, even though the camp was already housing other high-profile inmates such as Elizabeth Holmes and Jen Shah. The decision stood out because Bryan is reserved primarily for white-collar offenders and offers conditions far more lenient than Maxwell’s previous medium-security placement. Inmates there have since described special privileges extended to her, including private meetings with visitors in the prison chapel. Those accounts, reported by CNN, have fueled further questions about how the transfer was approved.
FOIA Request Triggers Lawsuit
A detailed FOIA request filed last summer sought all records mentioning the transfer, including emails, memoranda, and internal communications. The Bureau of Prisons missed its statutory deadline to respond, prompting the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press to sue on behalf of the Center for Investigative Reporting in federal district court in Washington, D.C. The agency’s initial answer in the case described an enormous volume of material. Officials reported locating 15.8 gigabytes of potentially responsive records that repeatedly crashed their download system. They now estimate the total could reach approximately 120,000 pages that must still undergo responsiveness and deduplication review.
Staff Shortages Slow Review Process
Even after the initial search, the Bureau of Prisons warned that it cannot yet set a firm schedule for processing the records. The filing pointed to severe staffing problems inside its FOIA office. Four senior staff members, including the former supervisory attorney, departed on February 28, 2025, leaving only two attorneys to handle litigation nationwide. One of those attorneys remains in training. The agency is already managing more than 50 active FOIA cases across multiple districts while facing a backlog exceeding 7,400 requests. Similar attrition has affected other departments. The Defense Department’s backlog rose 42 percent last year, while the State Department added nearly 6,000 cases. At Health and Human Services, entire FOIA units were shuttered before partial restoration efforts began.
Broader Questions of Transparency
The sheer size of the Maxwell file has drawn attention to the wider erosion of FOIA responsiveness across the federal government. House Republicans have discussed the possibility of a pardon for Maxwell in exchange for cooperation with an Epstein-related investigation, while Democrats have called for scrutiny of the prison transfer itself. The Bureau of Prisons has declined to comment directly on either the move or the documents. The public still lacks a straightforward account of why Maxwell received the transfer. The agency could release that explanation without waiting for the full 120,000 pages to be reviewed. Its continued silence only increases the value of the ongoing court effort to obtain the records.