The first witness to give evidence in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial was a former captain of Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous ‘Lolita Express’ plane.
Larry Visoski was the multimillionaire’s chief pilot and flew the financier for more than 25 years.
Asked what he had made of Epstein’s relationship to Ghislaine Maxwell, he said it was ‘more personal than business’.
But he added: ‘I wouldn’t characterise it as romantic.’
Mr Visoski said he had been hired in 1991 and had flown Epstein around roughly ‘every four days’. The pilot was so close to his boss that his daughter was reportedly married at Epstein’s New Mexico ranch.

As the trial’s first witness, Epstein’s pilot Lawrence ‘Larry’ Vizoski Jr. appeared on Monday. Pictured: Visoski in the cockpit of Epstein’s Gulfstream G550

Maxwell, aged 59, is scheduled to be tried on sex-trafficking charges. Maxwell has pleaded guilty to the charges.

The courthouse was occupied by protesters who held signs depicting Epstein’s private jet, dubbed “Lolita Express”, which carried prominent individuals such as Bill Gates and Donald Trump.
He described the interior of Epstein’s New York mansion in detail, as photos of the properties around the world where abuse is alleged to have taken place were displayed for the jury.
Epstein used his private jet – nicknamed the Lolita Express because of some of the alleged underage passengers – to fly himself, high-powered friends, including Bill Clinton, and a parade of young women.
Last year, it emerged flight logs for all of Epstein’s private aircraft had been subpoenaed, sparking fears among celebrities who had partied with the paedophile.
He was the Virgin Islands attorney general and he had a private island. The logs were requested by him.