Nurse denounces her dismissal after revealing the special treatment Epstein's partner receives in prison
For revealing the preferential treatment given in prison to Jeffrey Epstein's partner and accomplice, nurse Noella Turnage was fired
Noella Turnage, a nurse who worked at the prison camp where Ghislaine Maxwell—Jeffrey Epstein's partner and accomplice—is being held, denounced that she was fired for telling the House Judiciary Committee The House of Representatives is investigating the preferential treatment received by the 63-year-old French woman sentenced to 20 years in prison. In June 2022, she was convicted for her role in recruiting and trafficking minors for the sex trafficking ring headed by the New York billionaire. After serving several years of her sentence in a Florida prison, Ghislaine Maxwell was transferred almost three months ago to a minimum-security federal prison in Bryan, Texas, known as FPC Bryan. Subsequently, Noella Turnage wrote a letter to the House Judiciary Committee describing how Maxwell received preferential treatment at her new prison, including personalized meals delivered directly to her cell and even the privilege of playing with a puppy in her cell. The document also mentioned that the inmate was allowed to use recreational areas outside of regular hours. while those visiting her were provided with a “special cordoned-off area” and “refreshments.”
The nurse later stated in an interview with CBS News that her complaint stemmed from outrage at seeing the privileges granted to a criminal of Maxwell's stature, which made her feel “let down by the institution.”
Apparently, this was one of the triggers for ordering her dismissal on November 10.
It should be noted that a day earlier, Democrat Jamie Raskin wrote a letter to the White House exposing the contents of an email written by Ghislaine Maxwell and addressed to an as-yet-unidentified person.
The message described how her life had changed after arriving at FPC Bryan, where she received better treatment.
Upon learning of the firing of nurse Noella Turnage, a spokesperson for the Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee issued a statement condemning the action.
“The Trump Bureau of Prisons appears to have unjustly fired an individual for reporting to Congress the grotesque treatment of convicted child sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell. Retaliating against whistleblowers is a violation of federal law,” the spokesperson said.
Over the next few weeks, the release of Jeffrey Epstein's files will likely call into question the integrity of many prominent people for having been in contact with him knowing he was a sex offender.

