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Stunning New Hampshire home that was notorious criminal’s hideaway hits market…do you recognize it?

A remote and luxurious estate in Bradford, New Hampshire—once the secret hideaway of convicted sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell—is now for sale at $2.5 million.

This 156-acre property became infamous in July 2020 when federal agents stormed the secluded residence and arrested Maxwell, just over a year after Jeffrey Epstein’s jailhouse death while awaiting trial on child sex trafficking charges.

The estate, which Maxwell quietly purchased in 2019 for $1.1 million through a shell company named Granite Reality LLC, was dubbed “Tuckedaway” during her stay—a fitting name for a hideout nestled deep within the New England wilderness.

The main house boasts nearly 4,500 square feet of living space, featuring floor-to-ceiling windows, a grand fieldstone fireplace, a cathedral ceiling, and a sunroom with its own wood-burning stove. A converted barn and a detached garage add to the rustic luxury. The property is bordered by thick forest, accessible only by a steep dirt road and secured by heavy locked gates.

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Realtors describe the four-bedroom, four-bath Tudor-style home as “a stunning custom-designed retreat” ideal for nature lovers craving absolute seclusion. The listing boasts breathtaking views of the Sunapee foothills, a stone patio, and a wall of glass that frames the panoramic western horizon. Inside, the home includes a cozy den, a spacious dining area, a loft guest suite doubling as an office, a large laundry and mudroom, and a partially finished basement.

The property’s quiet existence remained under the radar until the FBI tracked Maxwell down in 2020. One local resident recalled seeing two low-flying planes circling the area at dawn just before the raid, while another man, claiming to be the estate manager, tried to shoo away reporters afterward.

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Maxwell, now 63, is currently serving a 20-year sentence at FCI Tallahassee in Florida after being convicted for her role in Epstein’s abuse network. Her legal team is now appealing to President Donald Trump for intervention, citing what they claim was a broken promise by federal prosecutors.

“She remains in prison based on a promise the government made and broke,” said Maxwell’s attorney David Oscar Markus. “President Trump is the ultimate dealmaker—and I’m sure he’d agree that when the United States gives its word, it should keep it.”

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Meanwhile, another of Maxwell’s former residences—a London townhouse tied to accusations made by Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre—has also gone on the market, listed at nearly $4 million. That property was named in Giuffre’s lawsuit against Prince Andrew, who she claims sexually abused her at the townhouse after they met at a London nightclub—allegations he denies.

As her past haunts are turned into multimillion-dollar listings, Maxwell remains behind bars, her fate now intertwined with legal appeals, political pressure, and the growing public appetite for the truth behind Epstein’s dark web of power, privilege, and abuse.

Published inNEWS