On Wednesday, the day the end of the government shutdown nears, House Democrats released three new emails from millionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. In one of them, Epstein writes that Trump “spent hours” at the financier’s home with one of the victims, whose name is blacked out to preserve privacy.
In another message, Epstein, who died in 2019 in a maximum security cell awaiting trial accused of abusing hundreds of minors, implied that the then US president, real estate tycoon and reality TV star, was aware of his behavior. “I knew about the girls,” he says in another email.
Trump has always denied knowledge of Epstein’s crimes and it has never been proven that he participated or was complicit in them. The president of the United States maintained a friendly relationship with the pedophile billionaire for 15 years, which lasted more or less until 2004, when the two stopped seeing each other. This was before the first child abuse trial came in 2006. Long before that, too, Epstein died in 2019 in a Manhattan cell while awaiting trial for sex trafficking, and Trump became president of the United States for the first time in 2017.
The shadow of Epstein’s crimes has haunted Trump since the pedophile financier’s death. The memory of that old friendship resurrected in the first months of his second presidency to the point of causing him the greatest crisis with his MAGA (Make America Great Again) supporters, some of whose most prominent members have been speculating for years on the case, a horrible sexual abuse plot with hundreds of victims. A group of these recently went to Congress to demand justice.
At the beginning of July, a joint statement from the FBI and the Department of Justice announced that the American authorities had no intention of publishing new documents on the pedophile, contrary to what they had promised in the previous months. Nor, of Epstein List, which allegedly includes the names of rich and famous friends who participated in the millionaire’s child sex trafficking ring.
Conspiracy theorists suspect that it exists and that it is not being made public to protect them. That joint statement also confirmed what the medical examiner had already concluded: that Epstein committed suicide in his cell, despite murder theories circulating around his death, encouraged by his strange circumstances, as the inmate spent more hours than expected without supervision.
The House of Representatives has been in recess since before the start of the government shutdown, which began on October 1st and is about to end more than 43 days later, becoming the longest period in US history. The House will vote on Wednesday to reopen the tap on public spending financing, as the Senate did on Monday. The end of the blockade will also lead to the return to activity of the House of Representatives and the swearing-in of Congresswoman Adelita Grijalva.
Grijalva was elected in a special election to fill a vacancy in the State of Arizona. Mike Johnson, Republican majority leader in the House of Representatives, refused to allow him to take office, even though it was within his power to do so. According to Johnson, it was so as not to deprive Grijalva of a ceremony with all the honors, given that the government was closed. Almost no one in Washington escapes the real reason: when he enters Congress, the Democrats, who are in the minority, will, together with a handful of Republicans, have enough votes to spread the Epstein Documents, and then it will be clear how many times and in what context Trump’s name appears in those documents.
(Latest news. There will be update soon).
