Ghislaine Maxwell is set to carry out her prison sentence in jail where she will be swapping her famous celebrity friends with some of the notorious criminals. Prison consultant Holli Coulman has shared Maxwell's prison routine and it is nothing glamorous compared to the life the former socialite has lived.
Ghislain Maxwell, the former socialite is facing 20 years in Florida prison after she was found guilty of child sex trafficking crimes which she committed alongside her boyfriend who was a convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Maxwell once lived a lavish lifestyle alongside Epstein and their circle of celebrity friends, who included Prince Andrew and Bill Clinton.
But in her new life behind prison bars, she will spend her time in a not much glamorous way and will be cleaning toilets for as little as 15 cents an hour at FCI Tallahassee.
Prison consultant Holli Coulman gave the Daily Mail an insight into Maxwell's routine in prison, sharing that Maxwell will start out her day by cleaning the toilets, doing the bathroom, and cleaning dishes before her long-term job is assigned to her.
This could be anything from managing payroll to reading water meters.
She will be up at 5:00 AM every day to begin her grueling work regime.
However, according to Coulman, she has been placed in a relatively lenient facility. "She certainly did not get one of the worst places. It's probably the best she could have got under the circumstances," Coulman said.
Meanwhile, the people she will be meeting in prison won't be anything like her celebrity friends. As Coulman explained that the former socialite would probably be disliked by many of her fellow inmates due to her celebrity status.
"There will be women who have been abused themselves and will not like her at all because of her crimes," she said, going on to predict that Maxwell's best bet was to be "humble".
"She must be humble. She's stepping into a world where a lot of these women have been there for a long time. She needs to know that she will be getting out before a lot of them," she said, adding: "The key to surviving is minding your own business, keeping a low profile, but her personality is not that way."
According to The Bureau of Prisons website, Maxwell will be eligible for release before her 20-year sentence is up, on July 17, 2037.
Until then, she'll be spending her time at the low-security Florida prison, which holds around 500 female inmates.
