
Nadia Marcinko com Jeffrey Epstein.
Nadia Marcinko is one of four women identified as “potential co-conspirators” and may be called to testify. Lawyers say the Slovak woman was a victim, but witnesses say she participated in the abuse.
A former girlfriend of Jeffrey Epstein, who visited the pedophile dozens of times in prison, may be called to testify in the United States.
The model born in Slovakia, Nadia Marcinkanow 41 years old, maintained a relationship with Epstein for around seven years and later worked as an assistant pilot on his private jet. Prison records indicate that Marcinko visited Epstein 67 times after he was arrested in 2008 following a conviction for soliciting sex from a minor, according to the newspaper.
Marcinko is one of four women identified as “potential co-conspirators” in a legal agreement that granted them immunity from criminal prosecution. Two of these women, Sarah Kellen e Lesley GroffEpstein’s former assistants, must now be heard by US lawmakers. A congresswoman argues, however, that Marcinko and Adriana Rossanother former assistant, are investigated.
Victim or accomplice?
In an email sent to Epstein in 2006 cited by the Sun, Marcinko wrote: “I will try to find girls whenever we are in New York.”
The Slovak woman has never been charged or charged with any crime. Her lawyers maintain that she herself was a victim of Epstein. The tycoon is said to have controlled every aspect of his life, including his weight and the way he dressed.
The case raises delicate questions about the boundary between victim and possible accomplice in contexts of sexual coercion and psychological control. According to Marcinko, Epstein was abusive and violent and allegedly strangled her and threw her down a staircase. But some of the Palm Beach, Florida, women whose testimony led to Epstein’s 2008 conviction told police that Marcinko participated in the abuse.
Marcinko told investigators that met Epstein in 2003, aged 18at a birthday party Jean-Luc Brunela model “scout” later accused of sex trafficking. A few weeks later, Brunel reportedly helped arrange a visa to take Marcinko to the United States. According to the Slovak, Epstein financed Brunel’s agency and had enough power to make her deported “with a single phone call”.
In 2010, Marcinko invoked the Fifth Amendment of the US Constitution to avoid answering sworn questions asked by lawyers for Epstein’s alleged victims.
After Epstein’s death in prison in 2019, Marcinko disappeared from public life.