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The speaker recounts the depth of the evil involved in Jeffrey Epstein’s network as described by survivors during a press conference. They explain that 14-year-old girls were told by a high school friend to come to an old man’s house, give him a massage, and he would pay $200, with a swimming pool and other enticements presented. The massage would escalate to sexual acts, and Epstein would keep their phone numbers. Through the shame and coercion, the girls were compelled to show up at his beck and call whenever he wanted. The only way they could get out of performing sexual favors was to find another girl at their high school who would take their place. One survivor broke down in tears as she admitted that she faced a choice between finding a replacement girl or returning to perform the acts, and she chose to find another girl. The speaker notes that even after it was known that these were 15-year-old girls coerced by an adult man, people still said they were sex traffickers and trafficked these women. The speaker emphasizes the realization of how evil it is for someone to make others commit evil acts and then implicate them, which made it harder for the survivors to come forward. There is discussion of why the names of the victims aren’t released. Epstein’s abuse involved billionaires who could pay off authorities and judges. After girls reached the age of consent, Epstein would traffic them to his friends, arguing that some were prostitutes who were 18 or older and thus consenting. The speaker explains that when these men had money, they could pay off police departments, cause reports to disappear, or influence judges. Many of the girls came from less affluent families, and the money paid to the families ranged from $150,000 up to $500,000, while the girl often would not testify. The men would then use defamation lawsuits to bankrupt the survivors who spoke out or tried to contest their false allegations. The process itself functions as punishment, with survivors forced to go broke just to defend their names.

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Speaker 0 asked Speaker 1 if they had a personal relationship with Donald Trump, clarifying if they had socialized with him. Speaker 1 answered affirmatively. Speaker 0 then asked if Speaker 1 had ever socialized with Donald Trump in the presence of females under the age of 18. Speaker 1 invoked their Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights and declined to answer the question.

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Jeffrey Edward Epstein, the speaker, is asked to confirm his identity and swear to tell the truth. He admits to being convicted of two counts related to soliciting prostitution and procuring a minor for prostitution. When asked about soliciting a minor for prostitution in various locations, including Florida, the Virgin Islands, New York, New Mexico, and Paris, Epstein repeatedly invokes his Fifth Amendment right. The deposition is terminated at this point.

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The questioner asked whether the public will learn the identities of the men who abused the girls connected to Epstein, with the information being released, and if not, why not; followed by a quick additional question. The questioner framed the issue as identifying the men who abused the young women through Epstein's activities. The official responded by challenging the assumption embedded in the question. They asked what it would mean to learn about “men that abuse these girls” and pressed to clarify that term. The official stated that, as of July and continuing to today, if the Department of Justice had information about men who abused women, they would prosecute them. They referenced ongoing work and restated that there is no “hidden tranche of information … that we know about, that we're covering up or that we're not prosecuting.” The official emphasized that they do not know whether there are men out there who abuse these women, noting uncertainty about whether such individuals exist or remain unidentified. The underlying point was that there is no claimed concealment of information or selective prosecution, and that the existence of further leads or prosecutions would be pursued if information were present.

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Jeffrey Epstein, a wealthy financier, was accused of sexually abusing young girls at his mansions in Florida and New York. He faced charges of sex trafficking and was connected to a private island known as "pedophile island." Epstein had influential connections, including former President Bill Clinton and Britain's Prince Andrew. Epstein died by suicide in jail, raising questions about his high-profile associates. The New York Times reported that Microsoft founder Bill Gates had multiple meetings with Epstein, even after his conviction. Gates denied any involvement in Epstein's illegal activities. Flight logs revealed that many powerful individuals, including members of the royal family and famous actors, had flown on Epstein's private jet and visited his properties. Epstein's crimes were known, but legal action was lacking due to fear and complicity.

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It's about how women think. Is that a justification for the wrongs done against young women? I've always believed women should take charge. Federal prosecutors stated that the video of Epstein's first suicide attempt in jail no longer exists. By 16, I had introduced him to 75 girls. You own two islands, right? Money is just numbers to you. How many houses do you have? I don't know. The greatest threat for those in solitary confinement is self-harm. Being confined to a room for 24 hours can drive someone to madness.

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The transcript centers on a cascade of allegations and connections surrounding Jeffrey Epstein, his alleged role as an intelligence asset, and the supposed cover-ups and blackmail implications tied to his network. - The Wall Street Journal obtained Epstein’s private calendar, which allegedly shows meetings with high-profile figures who might be expected to steer clear of a convicted pedophile. Notably, Epstein met with Catherine Rumler, one of Barack Obama’s top lawyers, who met with Epstein dozens of times and Epstein even tried to arrange for Rumler to work for Bill Gates. The question raised is how Epstein could be a “fixer” between Obama’s lawyer and Gates. - Epstein also met with William Burns, who was Barack Obama’s deputy secretary of state at the time and later became CIA director. Burns, at the time, was working for John Kerry at the State Department. The transcript notes that Burns then became CIA director, and that the CIA director attended Epstein’s Manhattan townhouse where Epstein allegedly had sex with underage girls and where other men were filmed having sex with underage girls. - The piece suggests Epstein was connected to multiple intelligence circles (the CIA, Israeli intelligence, perhaps Russian intelligence) and questions whether the American government allowed Epstein to traffic and molest teenage girls for blackmail material. It quotes the CIA director, William Burns, saying he met with Epstein only as someone “introduced as an expert in the financial services sector,” offering general advice on private-sector transitions, and asserts there was no relationship. - The discussion implies a sweetheart deal in 2002-2006, a prison-cell cover-up, and missing Epstein tapes, with the claim that everything Epstein recorded and all his properties went missing, while the Federal Reserve seized the tapes after Epstein’s death. It notes the only person arrested since then was the madam Maxwell. - A respondent, identified as Speaker 1, describes Epstein finding her almost immediately and knowing exactly where she was, suggesting she was being watched by cameras on Epstein’s island, townhouse, and other properties. - The narrative asserts that the CIA has the sex tapes and has used them for blackmail, labeling it a “blackmail jackpot” that includes hours of video from Epstein Island, the Manhattan townhouse, the Palm Beach estate, and the New Mexico ranch. It mentions Bill Clinton as a longtime associate who flew on the Lolita Express 26 times and visited Epstein’s private island. - Epstein’s preoccupations with transhumanism and life-extension technologies are discussed. At Epstein’s New Mexico ranch, it’s alleged he intended to seed the human race by impregnating women, with claims reported by the New York Times that he wanted to use the ranch as a base where women would be inseminated with his sperm, aiming for 20 impregnations at a time. - The Dulce, New Mexico reference places Epstein near a rumored underground complex and connects Ghislain Maxwell to a submarine license, allegedly transporting people to Epstein Island via an underwater port. The proximity of a U.S. military submarine base on Saint Thomas Island and Water Island (owned by Joe Biden’s brother) is noted. - The piece mentions Epstein’s efforts to ingratiate himself with tech elites, including Bill Gates and attempts to court Elon Musk, who reportedly declined after feeling uneasy. - It also raises questions about the whereabouts of 500,000 to a million unaccompanied children, suggesting underground tunnels and hidden spaces as potential refuges. - The closing line suggests that if someone does something that doesn’t make sense, it may be because they are being told what to do and threatened with the release of tapes.

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The former CEO of Abercrombie and Fitch, Mike Jeffries, was arrested in connection to a sex trafficking case. Rapper and music executive Sean Combs may be linked to a sex trafficking investigation. Jeffrey Epstein may have been the most prolific pedophile this country has ever known. The speaker claims to have had the story and an interview with Virginia Roberts for three years, but it was not aired.

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Jeffrey Edward Epstein, the speaker, is asked to confirm his identity and address. He admits to being convicted of soliciting prostitution and procuring a minor for prostitution. When asked about soliciting a minor for prostitution in various locations, he repeatedly invokes his 5th Amendment right. The deposition is terminated at this point.

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Jeffrey Epstein invoked his Fifth Amendment right when asked if he forced Virginia Roberts to have sex with his friends. One speaker stated they met with Epstein, who was convicted of soliciting prostitution from minors, to see him go to jail. Epstein claimed he had no idea if young women were giving massages at his house when he wasn't around and denied that underage women ever saw him. Another speaker claimed Epstein procured young girls for sex trafficking, but Epstein stated there was no indication of that to him or anyone else at the time. One speaker admitted to dinners with Epstein, which they regret, and another stated that meetings with Epstein were a mistake and were cut off. Epstein claimed he kept his underwear on during massages, which he doesn't like. One speaker stated that with more transparency, the case might have gone differently. Epstein was also asked about having what has been described as an egg-shaped penis.

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The unredacted Epstein files have been shown on Capitol Hill, with Ro Khanna and Thomas Massey beginning to view them. The discussion centers on why large portions of the documents were redacted by the DOJ and why Pam Bondi may not have complied with the Epstein Transparency Act. An ad aired during the Super Bowl urging transparency and truth about the victims and the case is referenced. Ghislain Maxwell, Epstein’s associate, appeared before Congress and pleaded the fifth when asked direct questions. Ro Khanna summarized his view of Maxwell’s deposition: after listening to her refusal to answer questions about the men who raped underage girls, she should be sent back to maximum security rather than stay in a country club setting. The conversation then returns to why the DOJ did not release the names of clients and coconspirators, with Massey highlighting the failure to release those names as a core issue. Former Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene appeared on Redacted to speak about the Epstein files. She emphasized the victims’ desire for transparency and the public’s right to know the truth, noting the files illustrate violence and possible murder, far beyond what initial perceptions suggested. Greene stated that the release of the files has shown the American people more than many can handle, and she argued that the DOJ is breaking the law by redacting certain names and deleting or redacting information in ways that protect the powerful. She also asserted that the files reveal a vast cover-up involving rich and powerful elites, and she tied the issue to a broader theory of an international deep state. Greene claimed that the problem is not just with individuals like Pam Bondi, but that “the man at the top is Donald Trump,” who she said initially opposed releasing the files and labeled the release a “democrat hoax.” She argued that Bondi works for Trump and that the FBI and other agencies operate under the president’s authority, making independent action difficult. She asserted that the president’s stance has influenced the pace and scope of disclosures, and that those who press for release face political backlash. She also described her confrontation with the two-party system as a “political industrial complex” that punishes dissidents, detailing how Massey and others have faced political and professional retaliation. Greene reflected on the personal cost of pushing for disclosure, recounting the pressure and the “knife in the back” she has felt from colleagues across the aisle. She described the political environment as a “blood sport” in which those pushing for transparency are isolated, while the system rewards conformity. She criticized neocon Republicans and asserted that governance is driven by fear and fundraising rather than principled action. She indicated that, for her, the Epstein issue underscores broader frustrations with Washington and the perceived inability of independent actors to enact change within a two-party framework. Regarding potential remedies, the discussion touched on the possibility of an independent counsel. Greene suggested that the American people themselves are the independent counsel, explaining that trust in politicians to appoint such counsel is limited. She expressed skepticism that the Epstein files will yield accountability, noting that the president warned that “his friends would get hurt.” She stated she does not expect significant resignations or indictments of major figures, including those connected to Israel, but underscored the desire for full transparency and justice for the victims. When asked about listing the names seen in the documents, Greene clarified that the list is held by the women involved and that reading it publicly could expose them to costly lawsuits; she did not have the list herself.

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Speaker 0, Jeffrey Edward Epstein and my residence address is 6100 Red Hook Boulevard in Virgin Islands. Speaker 1: Is it true that you forced Virginia Roberts to have sex with numerous friends of yours? Speaker 0: Wouldn't love my fifth amendment right. Speaker 2: You had a number of meetings with Jeffrey Epstein, who, when you met him ten years ago, he was convicted of soliciting prostitution from minors. Speaker 3: And, you know, I've said I regretted having those dinners regretted having those dinners. We did what we did because we wanted to see Epstein go to jail. He needed to go to jail. Were there young women in another part of the house giving massages, when I wasn't around? I have no idea of that. Speaker 1: Sent him three 12 year old girls from France who spoke no English for defendant to sexually exploit and abuse. After doing so, they were sent back to France the next day. Speaker 0: Please, they never saw a young underage woman. Speaker 3: You know, those meetings were were a mistake. They didn't result in what he purported, and I cut them off. You know, that goes back a long time ago now. There's you know, so there's nothing new on that. Speaker 2: We now know that he was and had been procuring young girls for sex trafficking. Speaker 0: We now know that. At the time, there was no indication to me or anybody else. I kept my underwear on during the massage. I don't like massages particularly. Speaker 3: If we had had more transparency, perhaps this case would have gone differently. Speaker 2: It was reported that you continued to meet with him over several years. Speaker 3: You know, I had dinners with him. I regret doing that. Speaker 0: You have what's been described as an egg shaped penis. Speaker 3: Well, he's dead. So, you know, in general, you always have to be careful.

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The speaker, Jeffrey Edward Epstein, is asked to confirm his identity and address. He admits to being convicted of soliciting prostitution and procuring a minor for prostitution. When questioned about soliciting a minor for prostitution in various locations, he repeatedly invokes his Fifth Amendment right. The deposition is terminated at this point.

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I only knew Jeffrey Epstein for five days during a trip to Zoro Ranch, his massive compound surrounded by government land in the New Mexico Desert. Epstein took my sexual innocence in front of a wall of famed of framed photographs of him shaking hands and smiling with celebrities and political leaders. After, he wanted to talk with me about what had just been my first sexual experience and directed me to take time to myself that night to cry. I told him that I wanted to go to college to study biochemistry. He said that he wanted to give me money for college. He asked me how much money I thought he should give me. At 15 years old, living in Northern Michigan with my mother, stepfather, and grandfather, I had no idea how to respond to a billionaire who had just raped me.

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The questioner asked the witness to list all the girls under 18 that the witness met and brought to Jeffrey Epstein’s house for purposes of employment. The witness responded that his job was to find adults for professional positions at Epstein’s properties (pool person, secretary, house person, chef, pilot) and objected to framing the inquiry around under-18 individuals. He stated that he did not hire people, but did interview individuals for professional jobs, and he is not aware of anyone under 18 aside from a masseuse who was 17 years old. The witness clarified that he “interviewed people for jobs that were professional people for professional things,” and emphasized that the work was for adults. He acknowledged that he did meet and hire people (or be involved in the process) but asserted that the only under-18 person he could clearly recall in connection with professional capacity for Epstein was a masseuse aged 17. When pressed further, the witness reiterated that he did not hire anyone under 18 as an adult employee, and stated that he did not recall anyone else under 18 aside from the 17-year-old masseuse. The exchange included a back-and-forth over terminology, with the witness insisting that his role was to find professional adults and that he did not encounter or interact with others under 18 beyond the single 17-year-old masseuse.

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Host: The discussion covers a range of new findings and questions about Jeffrey Epstein’s death and the surrounding investigations, focusing on footage, forensics, coded communications, and the involvement of powerful figures. JP: They claimed the prison cameras weren’t working, but footage shows at least one camera in Epstein’s area was recording. The cameras supposedly stopped the day Epstein was released back into the prison and were fixed the day after he died. Host: There’s a statement about Epstein being found dead in a cell dated Friday, August 9, but Epstein was found unresponsive at 06:30 a.m. on August 10. An OCME official said he would arrive at the loading dock with a black vehicle to thwart the media, and asked if a decoy body is a common tactic. Is that standard practice? JP: It’s exceptionally unusual. I’ve never heard of a decoy body used to trick the press in this context. Host: There’s mention that Epstein’s ear looked off compared with what’s typical in descriptions, and that forensic exams describe his penis as the penis of a normal circumcised male, which contradicts victims’ descriptions. JP: There’s been “a lot of powerful” footage from the prison area the day after Epstein’s death; the DOJ has removed some material from their site. The cameras not recording to the DVR was a known issue; a specific camera allegedly focused directly on Epstein’s housing area was reportedly not recording, yet a clip exists from that camera. Host: They’ve found sulfuric acid purchases. One line of thought is water treatment for a pool on Epstein’s island, but sulfuric acid could also be used to decompose bodies. There’s debate about whether Epstein would hire a water-treatment company or buy acid himself, and a tweet-inflamed exchange about its use in drugs. JP: There are claims that sulfuric acid could be for water treatment or for decomposing bodies; another theory is that it’s used for meth production. There’s also a claim that a hotel-ban on sulfuric acid purchases was posted, and Elon Musk and Roger Stone commented—Stone denying the “dead bodies” theory and saying it’s for drugs. Host: The discussion shifts to a hearing with Pam Bondi, which was described as unhelpful—she wouldn’t answer direct questions. This aligns with a broader frustration that the DOJ hasn’t followed up sufficiently on questions raised by leaked material. JP: The code-language topic: pizza and grape soda appear in emails that are redacted or ambiguous. A common interpretation is that pizza refers to girls and grape soda to something else, with other terms like cheese, pasta, and beef jerky appearing in the communications. Host: A DOJ intelligence bulletin maps code words used by pedophiles; “pizza” correlates with girl, “pasta” with little boy, “cheese” with little girl, and “beef jerky” appears in multiple messages. There’s a specific exchange: Jeremy Epstein’s people discuss a “torture” topic in an email chain, and others reference “torture videos” or “torture” in various contexts. JP: The interpretation of “torture” could be sexual in nature (role-playing) or something more explicit; there’s a push to see if the language is literal or coded. The difficulty is prosecutorial—coded language can be hard to prove in court, and people often plead plausible deniability. Host: There are examples like a discussion about “shrimp” and “white sharks” with references to Russian girls, and a separate exchange on “a baby” being bought, with Epstein replying in a way that avoids explicit commitment—further supporting the idea of evasion via coded or oblique language. JP: There’s a long thread involving a Harvard professor, a Nigerian-Portuguese contact, and an Israeli operation thread; Epstein’s reply, “I loved the torture video,” is read as a sexual or possibly role-playing reference, though another interpretation is that it’s about a non-literal, sexualized scenario. The doctor-patient or professional context is complicated by the presence of sexual tokens and “torture” terminology. Host: There’s also a notable exchange about “an aquarium full of girls” and “white sharks” with reference to Russian girls, and a line about a “king of Saudi” with possible high-level connections. The breadth of names—royal, political, academic—suggests a wide network, possibly used for blackmail, leverage, or influence. JP: A recurring theme is blackmail: Epstein’s network could have backed or driven blackmail operations. There are redacted or partially redacted files that could contain more explicit material, including a photo involving a public figure with a girl; even if the girl is over 18, the context remains incriminating and suspicious. Host: The possibility Epstein is alive remains a fringe theory, but there are inconsistent elements—the ear and nose differences in purported body images, the decoy body claim, and the press-release date discrepancy—that feed ongoing speculation about whether there was a replacement or manipulation of the body, or whether a genuine death occurred with unresolved questions remaining. JP: Overall, the files present a web of coded language, high-profile associations, and forensic ambiguities that keep fueling questions about Epstein’s death, the handling of evidence, and the breadth of possible blackmail networks tied to powerful individuals. Host: The conversation ends with a plan to revisit these threads, given the ongoing releases and the sheer volume of material, acknowledging that each new item tends to expand the mystery rather than resolve it.

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Jeffrey Epstein is accused of sexually abusing young girls at his mansions in Florida and New York, facing two counts of sex trafficking. He allegedly trafficked underage girls to his private island, often referred to as "pedophile island." Notable figures like Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew were among those who flew on Epstein's private jet. After Epstein's death by suicide in jail, concerns arose about the motives of those connected to him. Reports revealed Bill Gates met with Epstein multiple times and was involved in a charitable fund with him post-conviction. Many powerful individuals, including celebrities and politicians, were linked to Epstein, raising questions about their involvement in his crimes. Despite widespread knowledge of Epstein's actions, there was a lack of legal action against him, suggesting complicity among elites and media.

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- The questioning begins with noting a calendar or schedule, then moves to record-keeping instructions: "Turn off the video record at 01:05PM." - Mister Epstein is asked about sexual attraction to underage minor females. The question is objected to as harassing and argumentative. - Epstein invokes his rights: he states he must invoke his fifth, sixth, and fourteenth amendment rights to not answer questions today or any questions relevant to this lawsuit. - The questions focus on the names of any underage minors who were the subject of criminal charges to which Epstein pled guilty. Epstein responds, "I don't know." - The examiner asks what the charges were about and what the underlying allegations were. Epstein states the charge as "Solicitation of prostitution," clarifying it was not underage prostitution but prostitution. - The examiner asks if the victims or prostitutes were minors. Epstein repeats, "I plead guilty to solicitation of prostitution." - The examiner presses for details of the cases—what happened, what the underlying facts were, how Epstein engaged with the individuals. Epstein repeats that he cannot tell more than that and ultimately says, "I plead guilty to the solicitation of prostitution. Not underage prostitution, but prostitution." - The examiner asks to clarify whether the three females who were the subject of the guilty pleas in state court were procured by Epstein by having underage minor females locate other underage minor females and bring them to Epstein’s house. Objections are raised for argumentative, harassing, and assuming facts not in evidence; the examiner moves to strike. - The examiner asks whether all people with whom Epstein engaged in sexual activity were underage and brought by other underage girls. Objections persist; Epstein states he does not understand the question. - The examiner repeats a question about whether Epstein used underage minor females to bring other underage minor females to his house for sex; the exchange indicates the question had been asked and answered earlier. - Epstein again states, due to his counsel, that he must assert his sixth, fourteenth, and fifth amendment rights and cannot answer that question at the moment. - In closing, Epstein cites that his firm, Edwards and Jaffee, has been described by the US attorney as perpetrating one of the largest frauds in South Florida’s history, crafting malicious cases of a sexual nature to fleece people using bogus schemes and investment schemes. He reiterates his attorneys advised he must assert his constitutional rights, and therefore he cannot answer at this time.

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the victims themselves has have stated that this is a lot bigger than I think anyone anticipated. We are obviously being going to be requesting the SARS reports from treasury and also to following up on that. There's some very rich and powerful people that need to go to jail. But it is very much so possibility that Jeffrey Epstein was a intelligence asset working for our adversaries. But also to, I think the questions that we have is how much their own government know about it. And so there's more to follow, and I'm sure you'll be hearing from the chairman momentarily. Victims deserve praise for coming forward, including a woman who is as young as 14 years old when she was victimized multiple times by Jeffrey Epstein. The victims want information to be out there, but they don't want their personal information.

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Jeffrey Edward Epstein, the speaker, is asked to confirm his identity and address. He admits to being convicted of soliciting prostitution and procuring a minor for prostitution. When asked about soliciting a minor for prostitution in various locations, including Florida, the Virgin Islands, New York, New Mexico, and Paris, Epstein invokes his Fifth Amendment right. The deposition is terminated at this point.

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Speaker 0 asked Speaker 1 if they ever had a personal relationship with Donald Trump, clarifying if they socialized with him. Speaker 1 answered affirmatively. Speaker 0 then asked if Speaker 1 ever socialized with Donald Trump in the presence of females under the age of 18. Speaker 1 invoked their Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights and declined to answer the question.

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Jeffrey Epstein had a vault on his island containing secretive information and videos of people engaged in sexual conduct. Despite being rich, he managed to evade consequences for his actions. Some speculate that intelligence agencies like Mossad or a mysterious black ops group were involved. The charges against Epstein were limited to paying underage girls for massages, which seemed underwhelming compared to expectations. The speaker, a lawyer, found the indictment lacking in substantial evidence.

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Jeffrey Epstein, a man from Brooklyn, was not a member of any intelligence agencies or a hedge fund guy. He once expressed his displeasure at being called a hedge fund guy. While there are suspicions of his involvement in intelligence gathering or blackmail, there is no evidence to support these claims. However, he was known to ask good questions during seminars attended by people like Steven Pinker and the president of Harvard. The speaker, who represented Epstein, wants all the theories and documents about him to be made public. They have nothing to hide and hope that the judge will release all the documents.

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This woman abused children. I was abused by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell for over ten years. Ghislaine Maxwell was present for some of my abuse at the hand of Jeffrey Epstein. She was present. She was complicit. She was enabling. And it's one of my worst nightmares that she not only be transferred, but at the possibility that's very much going around that she might be pardoned. My first trip to The Palm Beach residence, I drove there from the airport with Gilen Maxwell, and they Jeffrey and Gilen were always very boastful about their friends, This is not okay, guys. This is not okay.

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In the discussion, Congressmen Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie were shown viewing the unredacted Epstein files on Capitol Hill, including material that had been previously redacted by the DOJ. The hosts question why large portions of the files were redacted and accuse Pam Bondi’s team of noncompliance with the Epstein Transparency Act. They suggest the move to foreground Bondi is a signal of political maneuvering to manage the release of the documents. Speaker 1 presents a Super Bowl ad urging the DOJ to release what the law requires, followed by a note that Epstein’s associate and alleged child sex trafficking figure Ghislain (Ghislaine) Maxwell appeared before Congress and invoked the Fifth Amendment when asked about the men who allegedly abused underage girls. Ro Khanna’s reaction is shared: Maxwell should not be in a cushy setting and should be sent back to maximum security. Speaker 2 emphasizes that, of the files released, the names of clients and coconspirators in the sex trafficking ring have not been disclosed, while victims’ names have been released. This is framed as either over-redaction or omission, with a claim that government names should not be redacted under the Transparency Act. Speaker 0 introduces Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene, who explains her perspective. She notes the urgency of transparency and states that victims deserve the truth, accusing the DOJ of failing to comply with the Epstein Transparency Act and calling out a persistent “battle” over the release of files even after the 2025 law. Speaker 3 (Greene) describes the impact of the disclosures, noting that the files reveal “violence, possibly murder,” and that survivors’ testimonies are harrowing. She recounts facing personal and political backlash for pushing disclosure, arguing that the administration and many Republicans have shifted their positions since the revelations. She asserts that the released files show that “the DOJ breaking the law” through redactions of names of former presidents, secretaries of state, and government officials, while leaving victim information exposed. Speaker 4 asks Greene about the possibility that the information might point to a broader, deeper network. Greene responds by stating that the files include FBI forms about Epstein, implying a level of official involvement, and asserts that the Trump administration has not released the information; she claims President Trump referred to the Epstein issue as a “Democrat hoax” and that Pam Bondi, who works for Trump, controls the release. Greene suggests the “independent counsel” would be the American people themselves, explaining distrust toward political figures and the two-party system. She shares that she would not vote to support foreign aid or a central bank digital currency, and notes the chilling effect of the retaliation she and Massey have faced from party structures, including loss of campaign staff and suggestions of political blacklisting. Speaker 0 asks about potential accountability or a special counsel and whether there might be more significant revelations. Greene predicts limited accountability, arguing that the president has influence over DOJ and other agencies, and that the people are the true independent counsel. She laments the “uni-party” dynamic and predicts continued resistance to releasing the full Epstein files. Towards the end, Greene reiterates that she does not plan to run for higher office and reflects on the broader political environment, emphasizing that the public’s demand for transparency could drive change. The dialogue closes with Greene expressing willingness to return and discuss further.
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