DOJ Drops More Epstein Files Detailing Trump’s Alleged Abuse of a Minor

The newly released docs include the withheld FBI interviews with the woman who accused Trump of sexually abusing her when she was 13 in 1983.

Politics
DOJ Drops More Epstein Files Detailing Trump’s Alleged Abuse of a Minor

Considering the fact that Trump has already been mentioned more than 5,000 times in the Epstein files and with some pretty damning testimonies at that, it was hard to imagine why the Justice Department would be withholding even more pages mentioning him—as made clear in a bombshell report by NPR last week. We asked then, “How much fucking worse can this all get?” 

A lot fucking worse—and still we don’t have all the answers.

The DOJ on Thursday published the three missing FBI interviews with the woman who accused Trump of sexually abusing her when she was 13 in 1983. They account for 16 of the 53 missing pages that the DOJ is reportedly withholding—all of which allegedly name Trump.

On the DOJ’s “Rapid Response” Twitter account, they claimed to have conducted a review and found that 15 of the missing pages had been “incorrectly coded as duplicative.” Sure Jan. 

According to the one document that was already published by the DOJ in its big data dump at the end of January (and briefly removed that same day), one woman told an FBI tip line that after Epstein introduced her to Trump when she was 13, he “forced her head down to his exposed penis which she subsequently bit. In response, Trump punched her in the head and kicked her out.”

The new documents include three of the FBI’s interviews with her about the allegations from 2019.

New files released detail a woman met with the FBI at least four times to allege she had survived being sexually abused by Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump when she was a child.
Nothing happened.

— Amber Woods @Amber Speaks Up (@amberspeaks.bsky.social) March 6, 2026 at 6:29 AM

In one of the documents labeled “Interview #2,” and date-marked in August 2019, the woman told the FBI how Trump allegedly put her head “down to his penis” and she “bit the shit out of it.” Then, she said Trump struck her and said “words to the effect of, ‘get this little bitch the hell out of here.’” 

In another interview from October 2019, which was the woman’s fourth and final interview, she said she was not comfortable being recorded. When asked whether she felt “comfortable” detailing her contacts with Trump, she “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.” The third interview points to a call the woman’s friend made to the FBI, relaying the claims.

Also in one of the interviews, the woman said Epstein “drove her and/or flew her to either New York or New Jersey,” and that Trump assaulted her after she was taken to a “very tall building with huge rooms.” She also said she thought the relationship between Epstein and Trump “included a certain amount of jealousy.” There’s never been evidence of this encounter, and the files make no mention of how her interaction with him ended.  

Speaking to NPR in relation to the newest files, White House Press Propaganda Secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump was “totally exonerated by the release of the Epstein files.” Which… is insane. 

All this comes as further insult to what Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said after the DOJ uploaded its final tranche of files: that the DOJ complied with the Epstein Files Transparency Act (the files came more than a month late and there are still thousands left to review); that there was no motivation to “protect President Trump”; and that the DOJ “didn’t protect or not protect anybody.” Seemingly, that includes the Epstein victims themselves, since several condemned the DOJ in January after it failed to properly redact information and exposed their details and nude images.

“Let’s be clear: this White House cover-up is ongoing,” Sara Guerrero, the spokesperson for Democrats on the House Oversight Committee, said after the latest files were released. ““Millions of pages still remain concealed from the public and our committee.” 

The new files were uploaded a day after AG Pam Bondi was subpoenaed in a bipartisan 24-19 vote from the House Oversight Committee, in which she will have to sit for a deposition and explain why the DOJ has so badly mishandled the Epstein files. 

On Thursday as well, Rep. Shri Thanedar (D-Mich.) filed to impeach Bondi for her handling of the Epstein files, right after the (officially disgraced) Homeland Security Secretary was fired from her post. Let’s hope they face the same fate.


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