🔗 Share this article Administration Decries 'Democrat Fabrication' as Additional Jeffrey Epstein Photos Disclosed Democratic lawmakers have made public a additional set of what they labeled "troubling" photographs from the estate of adjudicated sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, including among others Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, and ex-UK prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. The first release of 19 photographs—some of which have been seen before—along with another 70 unveiled later on Friday account for a tiny fraction of the nearly 100,000 images handed over to the House oversight committee, which is looking into the behavior and associations of Epstein. The disgraced financier died by an apparent self-inflicted death in a New York prison cell in 2019 after being indicted on sex-trafficking charges. High-Profile Individuals in the Photos Featured among the high-profile individuals visible in the opening set are public figures such as film director Woody Allen; Microsoft founder Bill Gates; and Richard Branson, originator of the Virgin conglomerate. Donald Trump appears in three of the first nineteen images. In one, he is seen with six women, whose faces are redacted. White House Reaction The White House reacted to the release in a statement, alleging Democrats of selectively "cherry-picking" the images for electoral motives and to "seek to establish a false account." "The Democrat hoax against President Trump has been time and again refuted," an administration official stated, asserting that "the Trump administration has done more for Epstein's survivors than Democrats have at any point by frequently urging openness, making public thousands of pages of records, and demanding further investigations into Epstein's liberal connections." Congressional Democrat Remarks The images were released without context, but as stated by a California Democrat and ranking member of the oversight committee, they elicit additional doubts about Epstein's associations with affluent people. "The moment has come to stop this White House cover-up and deliver justice to the victims of Jeffrey Epstein and his well-connected allies," he declared in a release. The publication of these materials comes as the oversight committee proceeding with its inquiry into the Epstein case.
Democratic lawmakers have made public a additional set of what they labeled "troubling" photographs from the estate of adjudicated sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, including among others Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, and ex-UK prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. The first release of 19 photographs—some of which have been seen before—along with another 70 unveiled later on Friday account for a tiny fraction of the nearly 100,000 images handed over to the House oversight committee, which is looking into the behavior and associations of Epstein. The disgraced financier died by an apparent self-inflicted death in a New York prison cell in 2019 after being indicted on sex-trafficking charges. High-Profile Individuals in the Photos Featured among the high-profile individuals visible in the opening set are public figures such as film director Woody Allen; Microsoft founder Bill Gates; and Richard Branson, originator of the Virgin conglomerate. Donald Trump appears in three of the first nineteen images. In one, he is seen with six women, whose faces are redacted. White House Reaction The White House reacted to the release in a statement, alleging Democrats of selectively "cherry-picking" the images for electoral motives and to "seek to establish a false account." "The Democrat hoax against President Trump has been time and again refuted," an administration official stated, asserting that "the Trump administration has done more for Epstein's survivors than Democrats have at any point by frequently urging openness, making public thousands of pages of records, and demanding further investigations into Epstein's liberal connections." Congressional Democrat Remarks The images were released without context, but as stated by a California Democrat and ranking member of the oversight committee, they elicit additional doubts about Epstein's associations with affluent people. "The moment has come to stop this White House cover-up and deliver justice to the victims of Jeffrey Epstein and his well-connected allies," he declared in a release. The publication of these materials comes as the oversight committee proceeding with its inquiry into the Epstein case.