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A stunned America scrolled through the latest Epstein file release on December 23, 2025—thousands of pages heavy with redactions—revealing hundreds of mentions of President Donald Trump but no proven crimes or “client list.”h

December 29, 2025 by aloye Leave a Comment

A stunned America scrolled through the latest Epstein file release on December 23, 2025—thousands of pages heavy with redactions—revealing hundreds of mentions of President Donald Trump but no proven crimes or “client list.”

The supplemental trove—nearly 30,000 pages from Epstein’s estate cache—showed a 2020 prosecutor email: Trump flew on Epstein’s jet at least eight times in the 1990s (four with Maxwell), more than previously reported. One flight listed only Trump, Epstein, and a redacted 20-year-old woman. No wrongdoing alleged—merely proximity pre-2008 conviction—but the frequency reignited scrutiny amid Mar-a-Lago grooming links (Giuffre recruited at 16).

Other mentions: subpoenas to Mar-a-Lago, media clippings. DOJ flagged some pre-2020 election tips as “untrue and sensationalist.” Critics decried redactions shielding elites; supporters called “old news.”

Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025)—naming Andrew 88 times for alleged assaults—amplified the chill: Trump’s orbit deeper, questions louder. With 4.2 million X posts under #EpsteinTrumpFiles (78% demanding clarity), America confronted the release: hundreds of mentions, no proven crimes, “client list” myth persisting.

Trump dismissed as “fake news hoax”; files yielded no bombshells—no tapes, no list. The stunned scroll lingered: redactions heavy, proximity raw, truth partial.

Giuffre’s legacy—her fight until April 25 suicide at 41—ensured the gasp: mentions thunder, justice whispers.

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