Key details from the 13-year-old Trump accuser's FBI interviews have now been independently verified, and what she described is beyond sickening. This is our president folks.
Reporters cross-referenced the woman's FBI statements against archived government records, court filings, police reports, and old news clippings from multiple states and detail after detail checked out. Her family background, legal history, the identities of Epstein associates she named, even her mother's criminal charges, all corroborated through public records.
A DOJ source told the Miami Herald that FBI agents found her credible enough to interview her FOUR separate times in 2019. The source was blunt: investigators don't keep coming back if they think someone is lying.
She described Epstein trafficking her to Trump at a building in the New York-New Jersey area when she was between 13 and 15. She told agents Trump cleared the room, then forced her head toward his exposed penis. She bit him. He punched her in the side of the head and had her thrown out.
Trump's DOJ nearly ensured none of this saw daylight. Her interview memos were withheld from the public Epstein database — the department later claimed they'd been "incorrectly coded as duplicates." They were only released after Democrats threatened a formal investigation.
It gets worse. NPR found dozens of pages that appear catalogued by the DOJ but were never published. Reporting indicates the department may be sitting on roughly 50 terabytes of Epstein files total, having released approximately 2 percent.
Two-thirds of Americans believe the government is withholding Epstein documents. Fifty-five percent say Trump has been dishonest about his ties to Epstein.
The White House called her "a sadly disturbed woman." They promised full transparency. The math isn't mathing.