Trump is in the Epstein Files
The proof is out
Now we know why Donald Trump has fought so hard to conceal the Epstein files.
He’s in them. And he’s in them a lot.
On Wednesday, House Democrats on the Oversight Committee released a new batch of emails tied to Donald Trump. And they’re damning.
Here are the most relevant exchanges, in chronological order:
Ghislaine Maxwell to Jeffrey Epstein April 2nd, 2011:
Michael Wolff and Jeffrey Epstein December, 2015:
Jeffrey Epstein to Michael January, 2019:
Email #1: Sent before Donald Trump entered politics, it appears to confirm that Trump spent hours with one of Epstein’s victims.
Email #2: Suggests that, despite Trump’s claims to the contrary, he has been on Epstein’s plane. It also implies Epstein believed he could “burn” Trump.
Email #3: Undercuts Trump’s claim that he expelled Epstein from Mar-a-Lago and suggests he was aware of Epstein’s activities.
Taken together, these emails suggest two things:
Trump knew far more about Epstein’s activities than he has ever admitted.
Trump spent time with at least one of Epstein’s victims.
To be clear: there is no direct evidence that Trump participated in Epstein’s trafficking ring. But these emails—combined with his increasingly panicked behavior and the Republican Party’s desperate attempts to block the release of the full files—make it far more likely that he knew enough to be terrified of the truth coming out.
What Now?
Expect Trump and the GOP to gaslight aggressively. Today’s messaging is all distraction, all noise. But behind the scenes, they’re scrambling.
Trump reportedly summoned Rep. Lauren Boebert to the White House, meeting with her in the Situation Room, to pressure her into withdrawing her name from a discharge petition that would force a House vote on releasing the complete files.
That is not normal behavior. That is the behavior of someone who is afraid.
And with good reason. These won’t be the last emails. A vote on the full release is coming. Reports already suggest hundreds of lawmakers may be prepared to break with Trump.
If Republicans refuse to release the full Epstein files, we should call that choice what it is: protecting predators.
This moment demands transparency, not loyalty tests. The public deserves the truth. And history will remember who stood in the way.







