Epstein Files - US Dept. of Justice Says Trump Is A Pedophile Rapist - Epstein Files
From
Phil Da' Lick@epsteinjddd@maga.gop to
comp.os.linux.advocacy,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,comp.sys.mac.advocacy,alt.home-repair on Tue Jul 7 00:08:32 2026
From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.advocacy
The only assholes who vote for pedophiles and
defend them are pedophiles themselves.
The department shared FBI documents outlining
allegations involving Trump.
President Donald Trump speaks during an event to
honor the 2025 Major
League Soccer champions Inter Miami in the East
Room of the White House,
Thursday, March 5, 2026, in Washington. (AP
Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)
President Donald Trump speaks at the White house
on March 5, 2026. | Julia
Demaree Nikhinson/AP Photo
By Erica Orden03/05/2026 09:30 PM ESTUpdated:
03/05/2026 10:31 PM EST
The Justice Department posted a trio of FBI
interviews with a woman who
alleged President Donald Trump sexually assaulted
her when she was a young
teenager after she was introduced to him by
Jeffrey Epstein.
The woman’s central allegation, according to FBI
summaries of her
interviews with investigators, known as FBI 302s,
is that Trump hit her
after she bit his penis when he attempted to force
her to perform oral sex.
The three files come as Democrats are
investigating whether the department
purposefully withheld materials that included
sexual assault allegations
against Trump.
Trump has denied wrongdoing in relation to the
Epstein allegations and he
hasn’t been charged with a crime in connection
with them. There’s no
evidence to suggest Trump took part in Epstein’s
sex trafficking operation.
Many of the materials released by the Justice
Department lack
substantiation or context.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt
called the allegations
“completely baseless accusations, backed by zero
credible evidence, from a
sadly disturbed woman who has an extensive
criminal history.”
“The total baselessness of these accusations is
also supported by the
obvious fact that Joe Biden’s department of
justice knew about them for
four years and did nothing with them — because
they knew President Trump
did absolutely nothing wrong. As we have said
countless times, President
Trump has been totally exonerated by the release
of the Epstein Files.”
In the files, dated between August and October
2019, the woman, whose name
is redacted, alleges that when she was between 13
and 15 years old, Epstein
took her to either New York or New Jersey, where,
“in a very tall building
with huge rooms,” he introduced her to Trump.
Trump, she said, “didn’t like
that I was a boy-girl,” which the interview notes
interpreted to mean
tomboy.
The woman said other people were present, but she
couldn’t recall who.
Trump asked them to leave the room, then said
“something to the effect of,
‘Let me teach you how little girls are supposed to
be,’” according to the
interview notes. Trump then unzipped his pants and
put her head “down to
his penis,” she recalled in the interview. She
said she “bit the shit out
of it.” In response, she said he pulled her hair
and punched her on the
side of her head.
“Get this little bitch the hell out of here,” the
woman recalled him
saying. At that point, she said, people reentered
the room. The FBI
interviews don’t contain information about how the
incident ended or how
the woman exited the encounter.
In one of the interviews, the woman disclosed that
she had begun working
with attorneys and “wanted to be upfront” about
“her pending civil case in
the event the agents determined a conflict of
interest could occur.”
The woman said she or people close to her received
a series of threatening
phone calls, one of which included a message left
on the phone of a co-
worker but intended for her. She told the FBI she
believed the calls were
related to Epstein, and “stated under her breath
that if it was not
Epstein, maybe it was the ‘other one.’” When
agents pressed her on who she
meant, she said Trump, according to the interview
notes.
In the final interview, agents asked her again
about her allegations
concerning Trump, noting in the document he was
the “current U.S.
president.” The woman, according to the interview
summary, asked “what the
point would be of providing the information at
this point in her life when
there was a strong possibility nothing could be
done about it.”
Trump has faced allegations of sexual assault and
sexual misconduct before,
including accusations from multiple women who came
forward during the 2016
presidential campaign.
In 2023, he was found liable by a federal jury for
having sexually abused
and defamed the writer E. Jean Carroll after
Carroll claimed Trump raped
her in a Manhattan department store in the 1990s
and then denied her
account of rape, calling her a liar. Trump has
asked the Supreme Court to
overturn the $5 million judgment the jury awarded
Carroll.
Carroll also won a $83.3 million judgment in 2024
after a separate jury
found Trump defamed her with an additional set of
remarks about the same
claims.
The House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee has been investigating
whether the Epstein-related documents were
improperly withheld from public
view.
“For the last few weeks, Oversight Democrats have
been investigating the
FBI’s handling of allegations from 2019 of sexual
assault on a minor made
against President Donald Trump by a survivor,”
Rep. Robert Garcia (D-
Calif.), the ranking member of the committee, said
in a statement last
week.
“Oversight Democrats can confirm that the DOJ
appears to have illegally
withheld FBI interviews with this survivor who
accused President Trump of
heinous crimes,” he added.
In a post on social media in response to the
statement, the Justice
Department said Oversight Democrats “should stop
misleading the public
while manufacturing outrage from their radical
anti-Trump base,” adding
that “NOTHING has been deleted.”
“If files are temporarily pulled for victim
redactions or to redact
Personally Identifiable Information, then those
documents are promptly
restored online and are publicly available,” the
post continued. “ALL
responsive documents have been produced unless a
document falls within one
of the following categories: duplicates,
privileged, or part of an ongoing
federal investigation.”
The documents come as the Trump administration
continues to battle
criticism over its handling of the files, about
3.5 million of which it
published in late January.
In addition to accusations over withholding
certain records, the department
has also come under fire from lawmakers for
improperly disclosing
identifying information of victims and for
redacting the names of some men.
On Wednesday, a House committee voted to subpoena
Attorney General Pam
Bondi to testify about her handling of the Epstein
files.
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