After some back and forth, Kelly agreed to be paid $200 total and a makeup artist $150 to get the women camera-ready. That’s when Maples’s assistant came up with another proposal: Would Kelly and the makeup artist be willing to provide their services for free? In exchange, they would get “exposure,” and Maples would mention them on her social-media feeds, the assistant told her.

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Kelly declined. “I was stunned,” she said. “I told them . . . I work for a fee, not for free.”

For starters, she typically shuns such exposure of her work with political types, so as not to appear partisan, since her clients include prominent Republicans and Democrats. And Kelly, who says she typically prides herself on her discretion, was reluctant to speak out about the booking gone south. But in the end, disgusted at what she called “entitled” behavior, she decided to share her story publicly.

“There are people who make far less than they do who pay full price,” she said. “People on staff — the incoming White House and the outgoing one — pay full price. It seemed like they were trying to see how much they could get for free based on their names.”

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Accepting freebies isn’t illegal for Maples and Trump, ethics experts say. The president must report any “gifts” over $300 to him, his spouse and his minor children. But neither Maples nor Tiffany Trump is bound by those rules, says Jan Baran, an attorney who served on George H.W. Bush’s ethics commission.

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And it’s typical for Hollywood stars to accept loaned gowns and jewelry and even gifts and free services by people eager to be associated with celebrities (and seen by their millions of Instagram followers). But in official Washington, where lawmakers and other government officials are banned from accepting most giveaways, such arrangements are relatively rare.

A spokeswoman for Maples declined to comment on this story.

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