reproduction: Trump and Epstein

The release of 3.5 million pages by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) brought new details about the sex trafficking scheme orchestrated by Jeffrey Epstein. President Donald Trump, 79 years old, appears as one of the central figures in the mentions, appearing hundreds of times in the records. Although most of the citations are not formal evidence, the files contain serious allegations.

One of them dates back to 1990-1991, in New Jersey, where an anonymous whistleblower claims she was abused by Trump when she was 13 years old. According to the report, the victim had reacted physically to the act, which resulted in aggression by the current president. Another complaint points to a sex trafficking scheme between 1995 and 1996 at the Trump National Golf Club, in California, which involved orgies with young people and Victoria’s Secret models, allegedly organized by Epstein alongside Ghislaine Maxwell, Bill Clinton and presenter Robin Leach. Trump vehemently denies the allegations, and the FBI classified the reports as “unverified” due to a lack of physical evidence or corroborated witnesses.

The orgy world and Epstein’s death

Jeffrey Epstein, who was arrested and died in his cell in 2019, is described in the documents as facilitating a “world of orgies” at luxury properties and on his private island in the US Virgin Islands. The material details the recruitment of women to satisfy a powerful caste. Despite the impact of the reports, the DOJ emphasizes that the collection is mostly made up of unverified clues and evidence, without concrete material evidence.

A elite americana nos e-mails

The files reveal exchanges of messages and travel records involving prominent figures from the global elite:

Bill Clinton: cited in passenger manifests and photographic records; Witnesses allege that Epstein commented on the former president’s preference for young women.

Bill Gates: emails from 2013 discuss meetings and requests for antiviral medications; the businessman’s foundation classified the allegations as “absurd”.

Elon Musk: messages about schedules in Florida and questions about parties on the island; Musk denies having visited the site or accepting invitations.

Steve Tisch: emails suggest recruiting women; the businessman claims that the conversations were about investments and adult women.

Lack of evidence and investigations

Although the release complies with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the DOJ emphasizes that no material evidence, such as videos or DNA, was found to prove crimes committed by the figures mentioned.

Source: vermelho.org.br



Leave a Reply