Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted accomplice of infamous sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, is reportedly living in trepidation within the confines of a Florida prison following her act of exposing two formidable Cuban inmates, which earned them a punishing solitary confinement sentence.

Maxwell, a former high-society figure now 61 years old, alerted prison officials about a bullying attempt by the pair, known within the prison walls as "Las Cubanas," who tried to strong-arm her into giving up her commissary items.

Following Maxwell's tip-off, the notorious duo was hit with a 47-day stint in isolation. Now, with their release back into the general prison population, insiders indicate Maxwell is living in fear of a merciless reprisal.

"Las Cubanas are not ones to forgive and forget," an informant shared. "Maxwell is seen as indebted for the 47 days she cost them. The prison phrase 'Snitches get stitches' rings true here. They'll take the earliest opportunity to retaliate."

The women, now released from the prison's Special Housing Unit at FCI Tallahassee—a draconian facility within the main prison—have had ample time to simmer over their solitary confinement. Here, inmates are kept in restrictive, desolate cells for 23 hours a day, with meals delivered through a small slot in the door.

According to sources, Maxwell is so terror-stricken that she's avoiding showers, known hotspots for retaliatory attacks involving improvised weapons. Additionally, she is reportedly accompanied by guards en route to her library duties within the prison. "Snitching is a cardinal sin within these walls," the source elaborated. "When Las Cubanas were released from solitary, Maxwell was virtually on the edge of a mental breakdown in fear!"