Epstein explicitly claimed Trump was aware of his illegal activities in newly released emails
- Newly released documents include emails where Jeffrey Epstein explicitly claims President Donald Trump was aware of his illegal activities, stating Trump "knew about the girls" and asked Ghislaine Maxwell to stop.
- In private communications, Epstein referred to Trump as "borderline insane," a "maniac" and "crazy," while also claiming, "I know how dirty Donald is."
- The release has intensified scrutiny, with Trump dismissing it as a "Jeffrey Epstein Hoax" and Democrats accusing him of suppressing evidence.
- The White House denies any wrongdoing, with Press Secretary Leavitt saying that Trump's hands are clean.
- The documents underscore demands for a thorough, impartial investigation into Epstein’s crimes, ensuring justice for victims and accountability without political bias.
A massive trove of documents from the estate of the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was made public, with emails included in the trove revealing direct and incendiary claims about President Donald Trump's knowledge of the financier's activities.
The House Oversight Committee published roughly 20,000 pages of records on Nov. 12. The records include include correspondence between Epstein – who died in 2019 while in custody – and his currently-jailed accomplice, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell.
As noted by
BrightU.AI's Enoch, the Epstein files are documents containing evidence like flight logs and contact information related to the late convicted sex offender. A whistleblower has alleged that thousands of files with more substantial evidence are being hidden by the Southern District of New York, obstructing justice.
Within these communications, Epstein explicitly implicates Trump. In a 2011 email to Maxwell, Epstein wrote that a victim, whose name was redacted, "spent hours at my house with him," in a clear reference to Trump. A later 2019 email to journalist Michael Wolff contained an even more direct allegation, with Epstein stating that Trump "knew about the girls as he asked Maxwell to stop."
The documents further show that Epstein held a deeply negative personal view of Trump, referring to him in various messages as "borderline insane," a "maniac" and "crazy." In a 2018 email to Obama-era White House counsel Kathryn Ruemmler, Epstein claimed: "I know how dirty Donald is."
Political and legal firestorm surrounding Epstein's crimes will continue to burn
The release has ignited a fierce political battle. Trump has long maintained that he ended his friendship with Epstein in the early 2000s and has accused Democrats of weaponizing the case against him. In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump labeled the situation the "Jeffrey Epstein Hoax" and accused Democrats of using it to distract from other political issues.
The White House swiftly pushed back on the documents' significance. Spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt stated that the newly released information "prove absolutely nothing, other than the fact that President Trump did nothing wrong."
This document dump renews scrutiny on the Epstein case, which was earlier this year thrust back into the spotlight after federal agencies reaffirmed that his 2019 jail death was a suicide and investigators found no evidence of a notorious ‘client list.’ The emails, however, provide a raw, first-person account from Epstein himself, ensuring the political and legal firestorm surrounding his crimes will continue to burn.
The Epstein files, now partially released, reveal direct and incriminating communications that implicate Trump in the late financier's activities. Despite Trump's denials and the White House's dismissals, the emails provide a firsthand account that cannot be ignored. This evidence underscores the need for a thorough and transparent investigation into the Epstein case, free from political interference, to ensure justice for the victims and to uphold the principles of accountability and transparency in government.
Watch this video to learn more about
the Epstein Files and cover-ups.
This video is from
Rick Langley's channel on Brighteon.com.
Sources include:
RT.com
MSN.com
BrightU.ai
Brighteon.com