Inside Ghislaine Maxwell’s new Texas prison where she will bunk with Elizabeth Holmes and Jen Shah

Behind the gates of a federal prison camp in Bryan, Texas, three high-profile women – whose lives once played out in the boardroom, on Bravo, or at billionaire dinner parties – now share the same khaki uniform, early wake-up calls, and tightly regulated daily routines.
Ghislaine Maxwell, 62, convicted of trafficking underage girls for Jeffrey Epstein, has just been moved to Bryan Federal Prison Camp, the same facility where Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes and Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star Jen Shah are also housed.
While the minimum-security facility is known for a relatively relaxed environment — there are no towering fences, no barbed wire, and no high-security cells — the women must adhere to a strict schedule.
Inmates are woken at 6 a.m. and are subject to regular roll calls.
“Inmates are treated in a mature and responsible manner,” according to the facility’s handbook, as reported by BBC, “and are expected to act accordingly.”
Rule violations, including a messy bunk, oversleeping, or skipping count, can result in disciplinary action.
Life inside revolves around work, education, and structured recreation. All inmates must hold jobs, earning between 12 cents and $1.15 per hour in areas like food service or maintenance.
Outside of work, inmates can take classes in business, foreign languages, and fitness, attend religious services, or watch television.
Meals follow a standard Federal Bureau of Prisons menu, which consists of chicken, tacos, hotdogs, and macaroni, and inmates are allotted one hour per meal. Family visits are allowed on weekends and holidays, and limited physical contact is permitted.
Maxwell’s transfer this week comes as renewed scrutiny surrounds the Epstein case, since an outcry over the Justice Department’s statement last month saying that it would not be releasing any additional documents from the Epstein sex trafficking investigation.
Now, Maxwell joins a prison population of just over 500 women, mostly non-violent offenders. Many of the women incarcerated there – including Holmes and Shah – have been convicted of financial crimes and fraud.
Holmes reported to Bryan in May 2023 to begin serving an 11 year sentence for defrauding investors in her blood-testing startup, Theranos.
The woman once hailed as the next Steve Jobs now wakes at in a dorm-style bunk, eats meals in a communal cafeteria, and earns a fraction of her previous Silicon Valley life.
Holmes has reportedly bonded with reality star Jen Shah, Shah’s representative, Chris Giovanni, told People in 2023.