>“Make no mistake, my polished exterior is a shield hiding a wound that still bleeds,” Anouska poetically proclaimed. Hopefully her “wounds” were at least partially healed by the $3.25 million she received from the Epstein Victims Compensation Program. (By the way, these settlement payouts are tax-free! What a deal!)
>It was determined over the course of the 2021 trial that De Georgiou, a posh British socialite, minor actress, and underwear model, was above the legal age of consent in England at the time she claims to have first encountered Maxwell and Epstein, hence nothing which occurred to her could be regarded as “illegal sexual activity.” Despite participating in an NBC News interview under her real name in September 2019, as well as a public hearing at the Manhattan federal courthouse in August 2019, Judge Alison Nathan allowed her to testify at Maxwell’s trial under the fake name “Kate.” Apparently this was a person on whose behalf it was decided that the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution must be suspended.
>Here is Anouska De Georgiou at a party in London for the premiere of the movie “Charlie And The Chocolate Factory,” on July 17, 2005. She’s the one with the lollipop in her mouth.
>By her 40s, Anouska De Georgiou claimed to have undergone “deprogramming” in her “mind and body,” and this led her to realize she’d been victimized by Epstein. “I have also suffered periods of disassociation,” she wrote in a “Victim Impact Statement” for Maxwell’s 2022 sentencing.
>Now she’s a “certified life coach” and has a podcast
Lmfao