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Maxwell trial courtroom sketch artist
Jane Rosenberg was one of the artists who illustrated the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell with dozens of sketches, which appeared in FOX 5 NY's coverage. Rosenberg talks about her experience in the courtroom.
NEW YORK - Courtroom sketch artist Jane Rosenberg has covered high-profile trials of the famous and infamous for more than 40 years including R. Kelly, Bill Cosby, Martha Stewart, and mob boss John Gotti. Ghislaine Maxwell is the latest.
"Ghislaine was really fun for me to draw because she always turned around and there was a connection between us," Rosenberg said.
Which made for some interesting courtroom sketches by Rosenberg.
"She would wave to me. She spoke to me a little. She sketched me right in the beginning," Rosenberg said. "She started sketching."
A sketch of Maxwell sketching Rosenberg while Rosenberg was sketching Maxwell heated up Twitter.
"I came out of court and I had a whole bunch of emails. Somebody called me and wanted to interview me and I said, 'What? Why?' And they said, 'Don't you know your sketch went viral?'"
RELATED: Ghislaine Maxwell guilty of helping Jeffrey Epstein sexually abuse teens
And that put Rosenberg in the international spotlight. Media outlets were fascinated that the British socialite, who was on trial for sex trafficking, was sketching the artist.
"Maybe it's a family thing that they like to sketch," Rosenberg said, "or maybe Ghislaine was just bored or isolated in the jail cell and happy to look at somebody."
That one occasion when Maxwell spoke to Rosenberg did not catch her by surprise.
"I was the first one in the courtroom and she said, 'Long day, isn't it,'" Rosenberg said.
Maxwell made Rosenberg's job much easier than usual.
"A lot of times I'm sitting right behind the defendant, all I see is the back of their head. Maybe they'll turn around for a little second and talk to their lawyer and I get a little bit of profile," Rosenberg said. "But this was really great for me. She would be right front view."
A jury on Wednesday found Maxwell guilty of recruiting and grooming underage girls for Jeffrey Epstein to sexually abuse. She now faces the possibility of life in prison.
DEC. 29, 2021 - US marshals block Ghislaine Maxwell from talking with her sister, Isabel Maxwell. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) DEC. 29, 2021- Judge Alison Nathan presiding over the sex trafficking trial of British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell. Lower Manhattan. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) DEC. 29, 2021 - Ghislaine Maxwell talks with attorney Jeffrey Pagliuca in federal court in Lower Manhattan. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Dec. 28, 2021- Accused sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell sits in the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse in Manhattan on day four of jury deliberations. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Ghislaine Maxwell sits with an attorney as attorneys Christian Everdell and Laura Menninger address the judge. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Standing are attorneys Christian Everdell and Laura Menninger arguing with Judge Alison Nathan on what to tell jurors about working late starting Dec. 28. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) 'Kate' questioned by Assistant U.S. Attorney Lara Pomerantz. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Ghislaine Maxwell enters courtroom at Manhattan Federal Court in shackles on Nov. 1, 2021. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell flanked by her attorneys at the start of jury selection in her sex abuse trial. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Ghislaine Maxwell sits with her attorneys ahead of opening statements in her sex trafficking trial. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell hugs her attorney ahead of opening statements in her sex trafficking trial. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell in a lower Manhattan courtroom on the day of opening statements in her sex trafficking trial. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) This courtroom sketch shows defendant Ghislaine Maxwell, bottom left, watching as Assistant U.S. Lara Pomerantz, center, questions witness Annie Farmer, right. Pomerantz has a photo of the late Jeffrey Epstein. Judge Alison Nathan, on the bench, presides in federal court in Manhattan, Friday, Dec. 10, 2021. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) This courtroom sketch shows defendant Ghislaine Maxwell conferring with her attorney Bobbi Sternheim in federal court in Lower Manhattan, Thursday, Dec. 9, 2021. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) This courtroom sketch shows defendant Ghislaine Maxwell passing notes to her attorney Jeffrey Pagliuca in federal court in Lower Manhattan, Wednesday, Dec. 8, 2021. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) This courtroom sketch shows an attorney, center, questioning a British woman using the pseudonym "Kate" to protect her privacy, right, on the witness stand at the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell, seated at left, New York City, Monday, Dec. 6, 2021. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell hugs her attorney, Bobbi Sternheim upon entering court for her sex abuse trial. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) This courtroom sketch shows a prosecutor unfolding a massage table at the sex-abuse trial of Ghislaine Maxwell (left), Friday, Dec. 3, 2021, in Lower Manhattan. The table was recovered from Jeffrey Epstein's home in Palm Beach, Florida. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Ghislaine Maxwell listens in court. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Lawrence Paul Visoski Jr. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Cimberly Espinosa testifies as a defense witness at the Ghislaine Maxwell sex-abuse trial. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Ghislaine Maxwell in court on Friday Dec. 17, 2021. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Attorneys for Ghislaine Maxwell confer over the jury's request for a white board and colored sticky notes. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Cimberly Espinosa testifies as a defense witness at the Ghislaine Maxwell sex-abuse trial. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Ghislaine Maxwell appeared before Judge Alison Nathan in Manhattan Federal Court on Nov. 1, 2021. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg) Ghislaine Maxwell in federal court in Manhattan flanked by attorneys Bobbi Sternheim and Jeffrey Pagliuca. (Sketch by Jane Rosenberg)