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It’s Monday. Some of New York City’s public libraries are reopening today for grab-and-go service.
Weather: Mixed clouds and sun, with spotty showers and thunderstorms. High in the mid-80s.
Alternate-side parking: Suspended through Sunday. Read about the new amended regulations here.
Headlines about the sex-trafficking case involving Jeffrey Epstein, who committed suicide last August in one of the most explosive story lines of 2019, had faded amid this year’s torrent of world-shaking news.
But the Epstein saga has burst back into the public discourse with the arrest of his longtime companion, Ghislaine Maxwell, in Bradford, N.H., this month. She has been accused of helping Mr. Epstein “recruit, groom and ultimately abuse” multiple girls, including one as young as 14, between 1994 and 1997, according to an indictment.
Ms. Maxwell is expected to appear at a court hearing on Tuesday.
[Who is Ghislaine Maxwell? The daughter of a British media mogul whose relationship with Mr. Epstein has raised many questions and, now, criminal allegations.]
The background
Ms. Maxwell and Mr. Epstein began dating after she moved to New York in 1991. She began spending time at his estate in Florida, entertaining prominent visitors from around the world.
Lawsuits have long accused Ms. Maxwell of managing a network of recruiters to entice young girls and women into a trafficking scheme run by Mr. Epstein.
Still, Ms. Maxwell remained in prominent social circles for years. In 2013, for example, she was pictured alongside Michael R. Bloomberg, then the mayor of New York, at a book party.
The allegations
Ms. Maxwell befriended victims and established a rapport with them, and would “normalize sexual abuse” by undressing in front of them or talking about sexual topics, according to the indictment in federal court in Manhattan.
The indictment also said Ms. Maxwell was sometimes present when Mr. Epstein sexually abused girls, which “helped put the victims at ease because an adult woman was present.”
Ms. Maxwell also participated in some of the abuse and lied about her conduct when questioned under oath in 2016 in a lawsuit, the indictment said.
She is charged with six counts, including perjury and enticing a minor to travel to engage in illegal sex acts.
The investigation
How exactly investigators closed in on Ms. Maxwell and gathered enough evidence to bring the charges is not clear.
But an F.B.I. official said that for the past year, the authorities had been tracking Ms. Maxwell’s movements and had recently learned about her relocation to a home in New Hampshire. The authorities have said she was hiding there.
She switched her email address and registered a new phone number under the name “G Max,” prosecutors said. They said she ordered packages using a different person’s name for the shipping label.
The response
We have not heard much from Ms. Maxwell’s side since her arrest.
But in a court filing last week, lawyers for Ms. Maxwell wrote that she “has always vehemently denied that she was involved in illegal or improper conduct related to Epstein.”
The lawyers sought to distance Ms. Maxwell from Mr. Epstein, and pushed back at the notion that she had been hiding from the authorities.
Instead, the lawyers said Ms. Maxwell was trying to protect herself from “unrelenting and intrusive media coverage.”
The lawyers asked a federal judge to release Ms. Maxwell from jail on $5 million bond, arguing that she did not pose a flight risk.
From The Times
Could This City Hold the Key to the Future of Policing in America?
Live Music Returns to the Shore: ‘It’s Like Getting Your Life Back’
11-Year-Old and 2 Teenagers Killed in Crash of Cars Doing ‘Doughnuts’
Eastward, Ho! Even Art Is Leaving for the Hamptons
Want more news? Check out our full coverage.
The Mini Crossword: Here is today’s puzzle.
What we’re reading
Great white sharks are lurking off the New York region’s coastline. [New York Post]
Demonstrators in Dyker Heights supporting the Police Department clashed violently with a counterprotest against police brutality. [Gothamist]
More than 7,900 New York City restaurants have been approved for more expansive sidewalk and roadway seating. [Wall Street Journal]
And finally: A summertime walk
The Times’s Valencia Prashad writes:
When I ended up in Rego Park, Queens, on a recent Monday, accompanying a family member on a routine (in-person!) doctor visit, I hadn’t realized how much I had needed an escape.
Like many New Yorkers, I often leave the city for nature breaks in the summer. But this year, with the pandemic and the constant stream of alarming information that can overload the senses, I’ve even been skipping the walks I love to take in Woodside, missing out on my neighbors’ Instagram-worthy gardening.
So instead of waiting outside the doctor’s office, I explored the streets of Rego Park: They were quiet, and I felt my mind calming.
[“Nature deficit disorder” is really a thing.]
That’s how I noticed that the landscape was amplifying itself — like uncut hair that says, “I’ve been working from home.” Flowers were popping up, impatiens and marigolds, and there was a giant shrub with white blossoms and a fragrance I stopped to take in as a bumblebee kept its social distance.
Becoming more aware of my surroundings, I saw a tree with small white flowers — a linden, very common in the city. Then I caught sight of The Cherries. Wow. It seemed as if Bob Ross had painted his “happy trees” everywhere on one block, only with bright red cherries and yellow-orange ones as well. In the middle of this lush scene, I suddenly felt centered and safe — hugged.
A lot of Queens neighborhoods sound green — Bayside, Forest Hills, Fresh Meadows — reminding us that nature has always been here for us.
Now my goals for this summer are more focused and cherry-tree inspired: No matter what’s going on, find ways to grow. Let’s go! Happy summering.
It’s Monday — stop and smell the flowers.
Metropolitan Diary: Train to the Bronx
Dear Diary:
I was just starting out as a lawyer and was to make my first court appearance in the Bronx. Having grown up in Brooklyn, I knew my way around that borough and Manhattan by train. I was less familiar with the lines that ran to the Bronx.
A friend in my office offered some advice.
“Take the Lex, but don’t get on the wrong train,” he said. “You want to go to Yankee Stadium. Just remember it’s Lou Gehrig’s number.”
I went to the subway station and got on a 5 train when it pulled in. I immediately began to wonder whether I was on the right train.
I asked one of the other passengers if he knew what Lou Gehrig’s number was.
He said he did not.
“DiMaggio was 5 if that helps you,” he added.
It did. I changed trains at the next opportunity.
— Jean Prabhu
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