A stunned podcast studio fell into heavy silence as former model Stacey Williams leaned forward on The Rachel Maddow Show October 23, 2024, her voice trembling with raw pain: “Epstein made me dress like a sexy nurse for Trump—it was humiliating, like I was just a prop in their game.”

Williams, 56, recounted meeting Trump in 1992 through Epstein—then her boyfriend—at Trump Tower. “Jeffrey said, ‘Let’s surprise Donald—he loves nurses,’” she said, eyes distant. “He picked the outfit: short nurse dress, stockings, heels. I felt like a doll—humiliated, posed for Trump’s amusement. They laughed; I was the prop in their game.”
The studio—Maddow frozen, panelists hushed—absorbed the allegation: no assault claimed, but objectification amid Epstein’s grooming. Trump denied through spokesperson: “These accusations are unequivocally false—made up by a troubled person.” Epstein, dead 2019, couldn’t respond.
Williams’ story—raw, unflinching—surfaced amid Trump’s 2024 campaign, reigniting Epstein scrutiny: pre-2000 ties (eight flights, four with Maxwell), Mar-a-Lago as recruitment ground (Giuffre groomed at 16). No proven wrongdoing against Trump—merely proximity—but the “sexy nurse” detail chilled: prop in a predator’s game, elite amusement unmasked.
Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025)—naming Andrew 88 times for alleged assaults—amplified the pain: women as objects, humiliation normalized. Williams’ trembling voice—survivor reclaiming narrative—ensured stunned silence turned reckoning: prop no more, game exposed, world forever chilled.
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