The New Hampshire hideout of Ghislaine Maxwell can…


A secluded New Hampshire estate that once served as the hiding place of convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell has returned to the spotlight — not due to new headlines about its infamous former occupant, but because it’s proving to be a tough sell.

Listed this summer for $2.5 million, the 156-acre Bradford property was quietly reduced to $2.37 million just three months later, despite boasting sweeping mountain views, two standalone dwellings and expansive acreage surrounded by conservation land, according to Realtor.com.  

The tranquil setting belies its dark association with one of the most high-profile criminal arrests in recent memory.

The secluded New Hampshire estate where Ghislaine Maxwell was famously arrested in 2020 has seen a notable price reduction just three months after hitting the market for $2.5 million. REUTERS

Maxwell, a longtime confidante of Jeffrey Epstein, was arrested at the property by federal agents on July 2, 2020, after evading capture for nearly a year. 

At the time, authorities had tracked her to the rural compound using GPS data from her cellphone. 

She had gone into hiding there not long after Epstein’s death in a New York City jail cell in August 2019.

The property last sold in December 2019 for $1.1 million via an LLC known as Granite Realty, which public records have linked to Maxwell and her then-romantic partner, tech executive Scott Borgerson. 

The purchase raised eyebrows at the time, particularly as prosecutors later described Maxwell’s financial status as “opaque and indeterminate,” citing numerous bank accounts and a web of financial transfers.

The 156-acre property in Bradford was purchased for $1.1 million in 2019 via an LLC reportedly tied to Maxwell and her alleged partner Scott Borgerson. Arctic Circle Assembly

The home’s listing today makes no mention of its scandal-tainted past. 

Instead, it focuses on the craftsmanship of the main…