Trump is mentioned thousands of times across the DOJ’s Epstein document releases, per the BBC. The most serious allegations come from FBI interview records released in March 2026: a woman told agents that Epstein trafficked her to Trump when she was between 13 and 15, and she described a sexual assault in graphic detail. The White House called the accusations “completely baseless,” per PBS NewsHour. The allegations remain uncorroborated, though Miami Herald reporter Julie K. Brown, who broke much of the original Epstein story, reported that DOJ officials found the woman credible.
Those three FBI interview summaries (known as 302s) were initially missing from the January 2026 mass release. The DOJ said they were incorrectly deemed duplicative, per Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s office. Independent journalist Roger Sollenberger first spotted the omission. At least 37 pages remain unreleased.
Former AG Pam Bondi, testifying before the House Oversight Committee, invoked privilege and declined to answer whether Trump directed her actions on the files, per ABC News. She said deputy AG Todd Blanche led the release process.
The four House Republicans who forced the files’ release through the Epstein Files Transparency Act have all paid a political price: Rep. Thomas Massie lost his primary, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned, and Rep. Nancy Mace failed to make a gubernatorial runoff, NBC News reported.
Andi:
Trump in the Epstein Files
Trump is mentioned thousands of times across the DOJ’s Epstein document releases, per the BBC. The most serious allegations come from FBI interview records released in March 2026: a woman told agents that Epstein trafficked her to Trump when she was between 13 and 15, and she described a sexual assault in graphic detail. The White House called the accusations “completely baseless,” per PBS NewsHour. The allegations remain uncorroborated, though Miami Herald reporter Julie K. Brown, who broke much of the original Epstein story, reported that DOJ officials found the woman credible.
Those three FBI interview summaries (known as 302s) were initially missing from the January 2026 mass release. The DOJ said they were incorrectly deemed duplicative, per Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s office. Independent journalist Roger Sollenberger first spotted the omission. At least 37 pages remain unreleased.
Former AG Pam Bondi, testifying before the House Oversight Committee, invoked privilege and declined to answer whether Trump directed her actions on the files, per ABC News. She said deputy AG Todd Blanche led the release process.
The four House Republicans who forced the files’ release through the Epstein Files Transparency Act have all paid a political price: Rep. Thomas Massie lost his primary, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene resigned, and Rep. Nancy Mace failed to make a gubernatorial runoff, NBC News reported.
Sources: PBS NewsHour, ABC News, NBC News, BBC, Sen. Whitehouse’s office
I add also :
https://wikispooks.com/wiki/Jeffrey_Epstein/Black_book
“Incorrectly deemed duplicative”, or “he raped so many kids we had trouble keeping them straight”.