IT seems like Ghislaine Maxwell is still in the doghouse after being moved to a fancy prison camp in Texas last week.
As the Jeffrey Epstein case has come to the forefront of the Trump administration in past weeks, Maxwell, 63, will be missing out on one of the prison’s best perks.

Ghislaine Maxwell is currently serving out a 20-year sentence[/caption]
Maxwell is noted as one of Jeffrey Epstein’s closest relationships while he was alive[/caption]
“Club Fed” also houses multiple other famous convicts[/caption]
She won’t be able to hang out with puppies as a part of their service dog training, according to NBC News.
“We do not allow anyone whose crime involves abuse towards minors or animals — including any crime of a sexual nature,” Paige Mazzoni, the CEO of Canine Companions, told the outlet.
“Those are crimes against the vulnerable, and you’re putting them with a puppy who is vulnerable.”
The convicted sex trafficker was transferred to an easygoing prison after meeting with the deputy attorney general in July.
Maxwell was moved from Tallahassee, Florida, to the Lone Star state in the famed Federal Prison Camp Bryan, where famed convicts like Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes and Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star Jen Shah are serving out their sentence, too.
The prison has been dubbed as “Club Fed” due to its cushy amenities.
It’s also the lowest level federal security prison in the country, with not even a fence around the perimeter.
“That’s a hard policy we have, so she will not be able to,” Mazzoni continued.
The organization, founded in 1975, wrote on their website that Canine Companions is “leading the service dog industry so our clients and their dogs can live with greater independence.”
It costs no money to its clients.
The move to her new home came after she spoke with Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche for two days straight, with the conversations yet to be revealed.
Ghislaine is currently serving a 20-year sentence after being convicted in 2021.
She has been seeking a pardon from the president, who has said he could do it but has not made it clear if he would.
Maxwell has said she wouldn’t testify in front of Congress unless immunity was granted.
I came face-to-face with Epstein & I’m convinced he DIDN’T kill himself

By Chief Foreign Reporter, Katie Davis
JEFFREY Epstein’s “overly self-confident nature” has made a lawyer who represented his victims doubt whether he took his own life.
Spencer Kuvin, who met Epstein several times, said the shamed criminal never thought he had done anything wrong – and arrogantly believed he wouldn’t be jailed.
He told The Sun: “From the times I met him and deposed him, and sat in mediations with him, he never, ever struck me as someone who questioned whether he had done anything wrong.
“He was always overly self-confident in what he had done and his belief that he had never done anything inappropriate at all, ever.
“There was never any inclination that he ever felt he wasn’t going to get out.
“He always felt ‘this is something I got to go through, I’ll be out of here in a flash, it’s not a big deal’.
“So it was rather surprising to me when he died in jail.”
When asked whether he thought Epstein was murdered, Mr Kuvin said: “I don’t know. I’m not one for wild speculation.
“I deal in reality and proof and evidence.
“And what I could tell you is that the evidence is circumstantial but overwhelming that it was not suicide.”
People from both sides of the political aisle were angered after the current administration concluded early last month that there was no client list for Epstein.
MAGA supporters in particular have relentlessly called for the release of the supposed list after Donald Trump had said he’d publicize never-before-seen documents on the campaign trail.
But Donald Trump has referred to the flurry of attention as “the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax,” which he says was peddled by the “Fake News and the success-starred Dems.”
He did agree, however, that all “credible” information on Epstein should be released.
“I don’t understand why the Jeffrey Epstein case would be of interest to anybody,” he said at the White House.
“It’s pretty boring stuff.”

The news comes after the Trump administration has come under fire for their handling of the Epstein files[/caption]
The company said that those who are convicted of crimes against the vulnerable are not allowed to work with the service dogs[/caption]