Posobiec opened the segment calling it “massive news” and a “plot twist of all plot twists.”
“Ghislaine Maxwell now potentially will be meeting with the Department of Justice. So we got the information out very early this morning that the DOJ will be sending Todd Blanche over to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell. Now, where is Ghislaine Maxwell held? Tallahassee, Florida, the Federal Corrections Institute down there in Tallahassee.”
He added: “She’s Lady Epstein, Lady Epstein right there and saying that Todd Blanche, the Deputy Attorney General, potentially personally will be headed down there to Tallahassee, Florida to meet with her.”
“The Department of Justice does not shy away from uncomfortable truths nor from the responsibility to pursue justice for wherever the facts may lead," Posobiec said, noting a DOJ statement. He said that Maxwell’s motives are likely rooted in self-interest: “Her motive is that she either wants time reduced on her sentence or a full-on presidential pardon. So this is where the competition, the tension, if you will, comes in. The tension comes in with Maxwell saying, okay, I’ll sit down with you. Here’s what I want in exchange.”
He explained that any deal with Maxwell would come down to whether she can provide credible information: “When it comes to any of these deals, a plea deal or in this case, a cooperation agreement, when it really comes down to it, you have to weigh that against a variety of things. Number one, justice for the victim, which is something that absolutely deserves for her to be behind bars. Then again, you also have to talk about accountability.”
“If she’s just gonna say, 'oh, here’s the Maxwell blacklist,' which is the same thing as the Epstein blacklist—no, sorry, not good enough, already been out there. You need to provide names. You need to provide receipts and name names.”
He emphasized the need for hard evidence, saying that if Ghislaine Maxwell wants anything from the Department of Justice, "there needs to be names, there needs to be receipts, and by the way, a full-on chain of custody.”
“It’s not enough to say, okay, here’s the testimony—this guy did this and this guy, no, no, no, no, no—not good enough," Posobiec stressed. "We’ve been down that road before. Everything, absolutely everything, that’s the deal.”
Posobiec also noted that accusations must be credible and verifiable: “When I say everything, I mean, who did what, where did it happen, and you also have to provide information that is able to back up the credibility of the accusation.
"Because there are people who are falsely accused. President Trump was falsely accused in Russiagate. He’s been falsely accused of illicit behavior with Epstein time and time again. That’s already been litigated.”
He concluded with a direct appeal to Maxwell: “Who else is out there, Ghislaine? What do you got, what do you know? Who do you have it on? And if you do have this information and it’s able to come forward, then maybe, maybe there could be a discussion about some kind of, I don’t know—I really don’t know.”
“But you’d wanna also hear, by the way, from the victims as well. And you wanna hear about how the victims feel about that. Because Ghislaine Maxwell was the recruiter. Ghislaine Maxwell was the one who began the process of grooming these young girls. Ghislaine Maxwell was the first one they met before they ever met Jeffrey Epstein.”
“What does this say about the culpability of Ghislaine Maxwell? Where does she belong? Folks, this is a very serious story. And this meeting between Deputy Attorney General Blanche and Maxwell could be the start of something absolutely massive.”




