Epstein Accusers Join Lawmakers to Push for Full Release of Documents

Matt McClain/The Washington Post
Danielle Bensky hugs Anouska De Georgiou as survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse gather for a news conference calling for the release of files on the sex offender outside the Capitol on Wednesday.

About a dozen accusers of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein joined House lawmakers and a crowd of hundreds at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday to push for the Justice Department to release all of its files related to its investigations of the disgraced financier and of his imprisoned associate Ghislaine Maxwell.

In emotional testimony, the women – some of whom were speaking publicly for the first time – recounted how they were lured as teenagers into an elaborate sex-trafficking operation run by Epstein and Maxwell and abused for years.

All voiced their support for lawmakers to pass the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a rare bipartisan measure led by Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Kentucky) and Ro Khanna (D-California) that would compel the Trump administration to publicly disclose far more documents on Epstein.

At least 201 Democrats had signed on to the discharge petition as of Wednesday afternoon. So far, only three other Republicans besides Massie – Reps. Lauren Boebert (Colorado), Marjorie Taylor Greene (Georgia) and Nancy Mace (South Carolina) – have joined Democrats.

Wednesday’s news conference was the first time accusers of Epstein and Maxwell have come forward as a group since the start of a polarizing debate this summer over how much information the Trump administration can and should release about the government’s long-running investigation into the matter.

“This is not just my story. It is about every survivor who carries invisible scars. It’s about the weight we live with daily. It is about the families broken and the futures stolen,” accuser Chauntae Davies said, fighting back tears. “So I ask you, President Trump and members of Congress, why do we continue to cover up sexual abuse and assault? Who are we covering for? Let the public know the truth. We cannot heal without justice. We cannot protect the future if we refuse to confront the past.”

Bipartisan pressure to release the entire trove of documents has been rising since Attorney General Pam Bondi announced in July that the probe was essentially closed, releasing a memo denying the existence of a “client list” naming powerful men who may have engaged in improper behavior and confirming that Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while in jail. President Donald Trump has repeatedly urged people to move on from the matter and on Wednesday once again called the focus on the abuse a “hoax that never ends.”

But much of the GOP base – including elected Republicans – was unsatisfied and has been pressing for more transparency.

Lawmakers have launched two efforts to secure more information, which they say will be released to the public. One is an effort by the House Oversight Committee, led by Rep. James Comer (R-Kentucky), to subpoena the Justice Department and the Epstein estate for documents and call witnesses for testimony. A resolution sponsored by House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) reaffirming support for Comer’s approach passed the House on Wednesday afternoon.

Comer’s committee on Tuesday evening released roughly 33,000 documents it received from Justice in what it says is a first tranche it plans to receive and release publicly. Democrats claim that most of that information was already in the public sphere.

Yet Comer’s committee has not imposed a timeline that the Justice Department has to comply with, while the Massie and Khanna effort would require the release of documents from the administration within 30 days.

Massie and Khanna are hoping to circumvent leadership and send their bill directly to the House floor via what’s known as a “discharge petition.” They must first gather 218 signatures. Even if those efforts succeed, the bill would still have to be passed by the Senate and signed by Trump, significant hurdles that may not be overcome.

Johnson opposes the discharge effort and has urged GOP lawmakers not to support it. Massie emphasized Wednesday that he only needs two more Republicans to sign the petition to force a vote, assuming all 212 Democrats are also on board.

“The message is that there’s 200 Republicans who could do something to protect, to get justice for the victims and survivors, and I only need two of 200, and none of them are stepping up to the plate,” Massie said.

Greene, usually one of Trump’s staunchest allies, stood alongside Khanna, Massie and the Epstein accusers for more than an hour Wednesday, marveling at the size of the crowd. She later threatened to “walk across the House floor and say every damn name” of others allegedly connected to the abuse committed by Epstein if it would benefit the victims.

Khanna said that securing the release of the files requires work across political lines, giving a nod to members of Trump’s MAGA base, who have loudly demanded transparency in the Epstein investigation.

“A nation that allows rich and powerful men to traffic and abuse young girls without consequence is a nation that has lost its moral and spiritual core,” Khanna said.

On Wednesday afternoon, Johnson said he had not watched the Epstein accusers’ testimony and still opposed the discharge petition. Johnson has said that Massie’s push to release largely unredacted documents would endanger the victims. However, all of the accusers who spoke outside the Capitol said they unequivocally supported the release of the Epstein files through the discharge petition.

“I didn’t see any of that. I’ve been pretty busy today,” Johnson said. “But no, the Massie discharge is poorly written. It does not adequately protect victims. And because we have so much compassion for the victims … we have to be very diligent about protecting their identities, the innocent victims who have already suffered great harm. They cannot be subjected to more.”

The ramped-up pressure comes as the White House has for weeks tried to tamp down furor over the administration’s handling of the Epstein files. On Wednesday, many of the victims said that hearing Trump brush off their abuse as a “hoax” was devastating, and several repeatedly insisted the issue is not a partisan one.

“This is not a hoax,” Haley Robson, who noted she is a registered Republican, said Wednesday. “This is real trauma.”

Brad Edwards, an attorney who represents many of the victims, told reporters that Trump has done an “about-face” since he spoke to him in 2009.

Trump “was friendly back then, did not think that it was a hoax and was trying to help,” Edwards said. “And now it seems like all of a sudden somebody is in his ear, and he’s not. So I’m hoping he’ll come back to where he was back in 2009, be on the side of the victims and stand with us.”

Not since a 2019 court hearing after Epstein’s death have so many of his accusers gathered together and told their stories. Nine spoke at the news conference with lawmakers, while others appeared at a rally beforehand. The rally included the brothers of Virginia Giuffre, who was the most outspoken of Epstein’s victims and who died by suicide in April at the age of 41.

By some estimates, there are as many as 1,000 victims of Epstein and Maxwell, one woman said.

“We’re in a sorority none of us asked to join. This is not a partisan issue. … We are here together to stand united,” Liz Stein, an accuser who said she was 21 when she met Epstein and Maxwell, said at the rally.

Some of the victims Wednesday said they are compiling their own “client list” among themselves but were scared to speak publicly about other abusers for fear of legal action or other retaliation. Edwards said the list includes friends of Epstein to whom he “farmed out” the women once they reached “a certain age.”

“We’re not quite sure how or if we’re going to release that,” said Lisa Phillips, another accuser, who added that the onus was on the Justice Department, not them, to release the names of Epstein’s friends they alleged also abused them. “Why do we have to say the names when the government knows the names?”

Victims also expressed outrage Wednesday over the fact that Maxwell, who was convicted in 2021 on sex-trafficking charges and is serving a 20-year sentence, was moved to a minimum-security prison camp in Texas a month ago. They also pushed back on transcripts and audio recordings the Justice Department recently released of interviews Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche conducted with Maxwell in July, saying she could not be trusted to tell the truth.

Marina Lacerda, who was identified only as “Minor Victim 1” in Jeffrey Epstein’s 2019 New York indictment, spoke publicly for the first time at the news conference Wednesday.

Lacerda said she was one of dozens of girls who were forced into Epstein’s New York mansion when they were “just kids.” She said she was only 14 when she met Epstein through a friend, who told her she would get $300 to give “an older guy” a massage. Lacerda said she dropped out of high school and, between the ages of 14 and 17, worked for Epstein.

“I never thought that I would find myself here,” Lacerda said about her testifying at the Capitol. “The only reason that I am here is because it feels like the people who matter in this country finally care about what we have to say.”

The government, Lacerda added, has documents with her name on it that could help her piece her past together. She said she would like to see those files released “not only for transparency, but for the American people.”