Friday, July 3, 2026

Epstein West Palm Beach Survivor Hearing #6: Roza - "Releasing my name while redacting the names of the powerful is a choice."

 

May 12, 2026, at West Palm Beach City Hall, a group of Epstein sexual assault survivors gave testimony regarding their abuse and the government's response. I listened to this hearing, which lasted about three hours, while I was out on a long walk. 

The next morning, I was searching news sites for more information on the hearing and was surprised at how little was out there. This earth-shattering stuff about billionaire sexual assaults, massive government failure, and the stories of the women who survived all of this and are speaking truth to power took some serious time to find. 

Under one video, someone posted, “This is awful. Why aren’t we hearing more about this?” My exact thoughts. 

I went back and listened again to the hearings. Because I was now sitting at a table and not navigating roads, I was able to watch them too. I took notes and am doing my best to summarize and condense, one survivor at a time. 

I’m trying to avoid editorializing. It’s not my place. The point of this exercise is to share what the survivors said. This is my attempt to help get the word out. 

Each survivor speaks for eight to ten minutes. My notes should take just a minute or two to skim, if you’re so inclined. Please watch the video too and correct me if I need correcting. It’s important to get this right. 

 

Link to hearing video: 

https://www.youtube.com/live/fHntY5BVY90?si=ag85yR9MrzXJaI5V

 

Roza’s talk begins at 54:30 and lasts about six minutes. She stops often to wipe her nose and catch her breath. It’s obvious this hearing takes a great toll on her. 

 

In 2008 at age 18 in her home country, Uzbekistan, Roza was recruited as a model by MC2 Model Management owner Jean-Luc Brunel. 

“Coming from a financially unstable background, I was the perfect target for coercion.”

She was promised a modeling career “beyond my dreams.”

In less than six months, the modeling company secured an O-1 visa for her, despite the fact she had none of the necessary qualifications. 

(The O-1 Visa is a work visa for individuals with extraordinary ability in sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics, or exceptional achievement in television and film.)

By May 2009, she was isolated in New York City, controlled in a manner she’d never previously experienced. Soon after her arrival, the agency claimed she owed it $10,000. She had no money, and no local family or friends to turn to for help. 

The modeling company controlled every aspect of her life: where she went, how she dressed, how she looked. The agency gave her enough of an allowance to “keep me afloat,” but never enough to let her be independent. 

Less than a month after arriving in the US, the agency sent her “to the home of a registered sex offender”—Jeffrey Epstein in West Palm Beach, who was under house arrest at the time, after serving 13 months of an 18 month prostitution sentence.  

There, she was introduced to his girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell and was told that she was a photographer who would help Roza build her portfolio.

Epstein “used the names of powerful politicians and his friendships with others in authority to demonstrate his influence." He said he was an investor in her modeling agency. 

He joked about his time in jail the previous year, describing it as “a game,” and bragged about how girls would visit him in his cell. 

He offered her a position answering phones at the Florida Science Foundation to help with her financial troubles. 

“One day, his masseuse called me into his room, where I was molested for the first time by Jeffrey Epstein.” 

Over the next three years, she was “subject to ongoing rape.”

Roza emphasized again that at the time of these rapes, Jeffrey Epstein was under house arrest “for the molestation of underage girls.”

“The fact that he could commit those acts made justice feel impossible to me” and took away Roza's  ability to seek help.  

She was not allowed to go back to New York City until after Epstein was released from house arrest, “where my nightmares continued.”

Those years of abuse turned into decades of fear that she still carries with her today. 

She eventually stepped forward with other survivors, hoping that those who allowed this to happen would be held accountable, and was assured that her identity would be protected.

Then the Epstein files were released.

“I woke up one day with my name mentioned over 500 times.”

“While the rich and powerful remain protected by redaction, my name was exposed to the world. Now reporters from across the globe contact me. I cannot live without looking over my shoulder. I can only imagine the long-term effect this mistake will have on my life.”

“I wanted to be a doctor when I was a kid.  I want to end this statement with a story.” 

She then told the story of Dr. Ignaz Semmelweis, who in the 1800s discovered the connection between maternal deaths and lack of medical hygiene, noting particularly that it was not unusual for doctors to go from the autopsy room to the delivery ward without thoroughly washing their hands. He hypothesized that cadaver particles from the corpses were transferred to mothers giving birth, leading to deadly infections.

He advocated for thorough handwashing and established strict sanitary protocols in his own practice.

Roza said the medical community rejected his findings, because they didn’t want to accept the reality that something as simple as their own inadequate hygiene practices was responsible for patient deaths. Doctors continued to operate with dirty hands, which lead to scores of preventable maternal deaths. 

Semmelweis was ostracized from the medical community, lost his job, and eventually was committed to an asylum.  

Roza likened the government’s actions in aiding and abetting Epstein to those physicians who ignored or maligned Semmelweis for advocating better sanitary practices. 

“Releasing my name while redacting the names of the powerful is a choice. It’s a choice to prioritize the comfort of institution over the safety of the survivors. The evidence is right here. Yet those in power would rather us die socially, emotionally, and physically rather than admit their own complicity.

“I am no longer Jane Doe hiding in the files. I’m a woman, a fighter, and I’m a witness. And I’m begging you, please wash your hands.” 

 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Epstein West Palm Beach Survivor Hearing #5: Epstein used her mother’s brain tumor to force compliance

 

Took a long break from reporting survivor testimony. But the recent news that the president of the United States on June 29 lost his appeal of the $5 million E. Jean Carroll verdict reminded me that when it comes to speaking truth to power, there’s no time like the present. 

We live in a country where: 

Half the country elected an adjudicated rapist who also has more than two dozen credible sexual harassment/ assault accusations lodged against him. Here’s a partial listing of his accusers, as of September 2020, if you care to check that out: https://abcnews.com/Politics/list-trumps-accusers-allegations-sexual-misconduct/story?id=51956410.

This week, billionaire businessman Steve Witkoff, a Trump-appointed US Envoy with no diplomatic experience  and no experience whatsoever in mediating between warring nations, who has massive economic ties and business interests in the Middle East, yelled at and cut the microphone of Congresswoman Madeleine Dean (D-PA) during a congressional briefing call on the Iran ceasefire deal. Per Dean, he called her questions “smart-assed” and “stupid” after she asked questions about the terms of the memorandum of understanding and asked Witkoff about his business interests in the region. A special envoy muted a Congresswoman’s microphone. 

He called her names because he didn’t like her questions. Apparently, this is how we treat women now, which makes complete sense because our role model misogynist president regularly blasts female reporters on their looks and intelligence. Piggies everywhere. 

So given these latest insults to women everywhere, it felt like a good time to revisit the West Palm hearings, and share more words from the women, young girls at the time of the abuse and  barely teens some of them, whose lives were changed forever, by our president’s dear friend, Jeffrey Epstein – with whom Trump shared many “wonderful secrets.” (Per the birthday card Trump says he didn’t send to Epstein.)

May 12, 2026, at West Palm Beach City Hall, a group of Epstein sexual assault survivors gave testimony regarding their abuse and the government's response. I listened to this hearing, which lasted about three hours, while I was out on a long walk. 

The next morning, I was searching news sites for more information on the hearing and was surprised at how little was out there. This earth-shattering stuff about billionaire sexual assaults, massive government failure, and the stories of the women who survived all of this and are speaking truth to power took some serious time to find. 

Under one video, someone posted, “This is awful. Why aren’t we hearing more about this?” My exact thoughts. 

I went back and listened again to the hearings. Because I was now sitting at a table and not navigating roads, I was able to watch them too. I took notes and am doing my best to summarize and condense, one survivor at a time. 

I’m trying to avoid editorializing. It’s not my place. The point of this exercise is to share what the survivors said. This is my attempt to help get the word out. 

Each survivor speaks for eight to ten minutes. My notes should take just a minute or two to skim, if you’re so inclined. Please watch the video too and correct me if I need correcting. It’s important to get this right. 

 

Link to hearing video: 

https://www.youtube.com/live/fHntY5BVY90?si=ag85yR9MrzXJaI5V

Dani Bensky’s talk begins at 47:10 and continues for about five minutes. 

Epstein abused her in 2004 and 2005, eight years after Maria Farmer first reported Jeffrey Epstein to the FBI. 

She was seventeen. 

She lives with PTSD because of the trauma she experienced. 

Was trafficked “only” to Jeffrey, “which unfortunately is not the case for so many others.” 

Was recruited by two other young women, one in late teens, one only 13 who was trying to escape Epstein’s abuse by bringing him new girls.

Epstein weaponized her “aspirations and dreams” by weaponizing the language of the dance community – she was a dancer -- and making false promises. 

Shortly before meeting Epstein, Bensky’s mother was diagnosed with a brain tumor. Bensky saw Epstein’s name on a donor wall and contacted him, thinking he was a medical expert and could use his pull to help her mother. 

Instead, he sexually abused her. Then he “used her mother’s brain scans against her” and told her she needed to either recruit more girls for him or do more for him.

She recruited no one, “just endured the abuse.” 

In May 2005, mom had successful tumor removal and Bensky was able to “escape Jeffrey’s web.” 

To keep her from reporting him to authorities, Epstein threatened her friend and told Bensky she would be arrested for prostitution if she went to police. 

The Epstein reports that have so far been released have shown Bensky’s name multiple times, her address, her employer at the time, where she was studying, “and other identifying information.”

In one document, her nickname was redacted, but just a few line later, her entire legal name was not. 

“I am just one of hundreds of survivors exposed like this.”

She learned a few weeks before the hearing that her name appeared yet again in a newly-released third batch consisting of only twenty documents.

These results are available to “the whole world. . .  my child, my students, my students’ parents, my friends, my employers, my colleagues, my family. I am public.” 

This outing of survivor names does real, irrevocable damage. 

For Bensky, accountability looks like: removing perpetrators from power, seeing arrests made, and laws passed that further protect victim’s rights.  

“When systems protect the powerful rather than the victim, abuse becomes normalized. “

 

 

 

Friday, June 5, 2026

Epstein West Palm Beach Survivor Hearing #4: Jena-Lisa Jones, a high school freshman when Epstein attacked


May 12, 2026, at West Palm Beach City Hall, a group of Epstein sexual assault survivors gave testimony regarding their abuse and the government's response. I listened to this hearing, which lasted about three hours, while I was out on a long walk. 

The next morning, I was searching news sites for more information on the hearing and was surprised at how little was out there. This earth-shattering stuff about billionaire sexual assaults, massive government failure, and the stories of the women who survived all of this and are speaking truth to power took some serious time to find. 

Under one video, someone posted, “This is awful. Why aren’t we hearing more about this?” My exact thoughts. 

I went back and listened again to the hearings. Because I was now sitting at a table and not navigating roads, I was able to watch them too. I took notes and am doing my best to summarize and condense, one survivor at a time. 

I’m trying to avoid editorializing. It’s not my place. The point of this exercise is to share what the survivors said. This is my attempt to help get the word out. 

Each survivor speaks for eight to ten minutes. My notes should take just a minute or two to skim, if you’re so inclined. Please watch the video too and correct me if I need correcting. It’s important to get this right. 

Link to hearing video: 

https://www.youtube.com/live/fHntY5BVY90?si=ag85yR9MrzXJaI5V


Jena-Lisa Jones begins her five-minute talk at 40:20. 

Her voice shakes but she soldiers on, wiping away tears as she speaks. 

She was a freshman in high school in West Palm Beach, age 14, when she was attacked by Epstein. 

“For a long time, I stayed silent because I was afraid and I did not understand how this could happen to me.”

She demands government transparency and accountability. 

How was Epstein given a non-prosecution agreement even though there was evidence he abused dozens of children, including her?

How was he allowed to leave jail in 2009 and continue harming young girls?

The Department of Justice continues to harm survivors by publicly releasing survivor’s names, social security numbers, and deeply personal information. As a result: 

-              Husbands learned of their wives’ abuse. 

-              Children learned of the abuse of their mothers from reporters, strangers on the internet, and other kids at school. 

-              Fellow survivors learned that some of their friends had also been abused because they saw their names. 

-              Survivors saw the most intimate details of their own trauma publicly exposed. 

Government promised repeatedly that survivors' info would be protected. “We came to you seeking answers for why our rights were violated in 2007, and in that process our rights were violated again. “

If the government is serious about making changes it must acknowledge the failures – when Epstein was set free in 2009 and again “when our privacy was shattered this year.” 

The government must take responsibility by providing “meaningful remedies” to the survivors who’ve been harmed over and over again.  

“Don’t force us to relive this through more litigation. “

Pass a law requiring the government to compensate victims for the harm caused by releasing this information 

Do not pardon Ghislaine Maxwell

If there are other men who have hurt women, prosecute them also. But please leave the survivors alone. 

If a woman tells you she is a victim, listen to her. Believe her. Respect her trauma.

“Epstein tried to paint his victims as bad guys to avoid responsibility for himself. Learn and understand that.”

“Sharing our stories should be a choice, the choice I was able to make today.” Testifying should not be something survivors are forced to do. 

Women abused by Epstein and groomed by Maxwell should not be treated like criminals. 

Do not blame survivors for the crimes of the abusers. 

Education is job one. 

“I’m here for our children.”

“I didn’t have the language. Didn’t know who to tell. Didn’t have the tools or support we needed.”

Every middle and high school student in the nation needs to receive instruction on the signs of sexual abuse and exploitation and how to report it. 

Train adults and provide accessible resources. 

Real change requires leadership at a national level. One of the most important places to begin is in our schools

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Unpacking the drive home: One box at a time

The most recent drive from cornfields to clam flats was stressful, to say the least. The worst of it? I brought the stress on myself, because foremost in my brain was the memory of the last time I drove east with my pets. It was on that trip, exactly a year ago, that one of my cats, Gus Gus, passed away.

 I had no idea he was ill. Though I suspected something was off, I assumed the issue was more about territorial posturing than anything medical. 

Gus was older, wiser, and had always been a spoiled, domesticated feline prince.  

Patrick my newest addition, hated him. Pat was younger, bigger, and rougher. He’d spent the first year of his life in survival mode, a tough street cat. Then I trapped him. Within weeks, he was settled in like the royalty he was born to be. 

Given that he was at heart a cat, Gus was unusually tolerant of Patrick. When they first met, Gus tried cuddling him and even gave Pat first dibs on their shredded cat food. But when it came to Gus, Pat was all about winning. 

Gus was a pile of mush. Patrick was and still is an alpha. There was one year of battles before we embarked on that devastating fateful trip last year. 

I didn’t realize Gus was in serious trouble until the second, the final night, of our voyage. When I let the cats out of their carriers in our cut-rate, highway motel – pets welcome, the others scampered out and immediately commenced sniffing around. 

Gus didn’t move. I pulled him from the carrier. He tried to stand but trembling, sunk back onto his tummy. In seconds, I was online searching emergency vets. Found one just a few miles down the road. Three hours, two thousand dollars of testing, and many tears later, Gus passed away.  

Numb, exhausted, I ordered his cremains sent to where we were headed, went back to the motel, got no sleep, then drove another four hundred miles the next day. 

How stressed out did all this make me? His box arrived a few weeks later, while I was running a marathon in another state about three hundred miles south. I got the delivery notification while I was taking a water break about fifteen miles in. 

I panicked, picturing poor Gus’s box outside on the cement stoop in the elements and subject to rain, heat, predators. Instead of running, I commenced walking, and started searching phone numbers, calling neighbors I barely knew, and leaving messages pleading that they pleasepleaseplease keep the box safe for me until I got back a few days later. I spent more time the next hour planning for Gus’s remains than I did running on the course. 

When I got home, after two marathons in two days, I was so relieved to have that cardboard box in my possession. I don’t even recall what I did with the race medals. 

I couldn’t bring myself to unpack Gus’s box. It stayed on the table next to the front door the entire summer. When the other pets and I drove back to cornfield land that fall, I packed it with the rest of my luggage. 

That same package, wrapped in postal service tape, covered in stamps, stayed on my bedside table all fall, winter, spring. 

It was on the table when I went to bed. I’d notice it with some surprise, and say to myself, “I should really open that. It's too late now. I’ll do it tomorrow.” 

Tomorrow would come and the box would be there, still waiting. Again, I’d look at it like I’d never seen it before and think, “I’ll open it before I go to bed tonight.” 

For nine months it sat there, untouched. For the better part of a year, I reminded myself each night and morning that I should really open that box, but I never did. 

Then, a few days ago I was packing the car for this next trip east. The trunk was full and I’d just put down a folded blanket on the back seat and put puppy pads on top of that, just enough room for three cat carriers, along with their food, bowls, litter, plus a backpack with some overnight things for me. 

All that was left was to get myself and the kitties in the car the next morning then drive the 1,300 +miles route I’ve driven at least a dozen times. 

I’ve driven east two times since Gus passed, but this was the first trip back since then that I’d be taking the cats. 

The replaying of that horrible night that Gus died would not leave my head. 

For the billionth time I looked at that little cardboard box, and I swear that box looked right back at me. Without another thought, I ripped off the band aid. In seconds, mailing tape curled at my feet.  In my hands I held a simple mahogany box, silky to the touch, with Gus’s name engraved on a silvery plate on top. It was beautiful and horrible. 

Gently, I placed the box at the bottom of my pocketbook, which always stays attached to my body when I travel. There was something comforting about having Gus close by. The proximity meant he was in my thoughts the whole drive. 

I don't think the world is a welcoming place right now, but for some reason having Gus near me shifted my mindset. I was overly solicitous when it came to making sure the cats were comfortable: multiple stops, head pats, treats. Poor things. I woke them from some solid naps just so that I could scratch their little chins. I looked for kindness on the road and found it. 

Day one

First. Coffee and gas stop in Iowa. Amazing kind clerk who asked so many questions about Massachusetts -- while I was itching to get on the road and doing my best to disguise my impatience -- and told me about how he hoped to visit one day but for now his favorite place was Colorado, which he visited once with his dad when he was little. 

Him: There were huge mountains all around me. I felt so tiny. It was awesome. 

Second. At new to me motel in Ohio which online said it allowed pets. 

Me, exhausted after driving 665 miles with constant threat of high winds and heavy thunderstorms, checking in: First, chatted with the clerk about how bad the traffic was, then said, “Sorry.  I’m a little impatient. It’s warm out (88 degrees at 7 pm) and the cats are in the car, and I don’t want them to overheat. 

Clerk, brusquely: Oh, we don’t allow pets. Sorry. 

Me, agitated in a way that one can only be after a day living on large coffees and bottles of diet, caffeinated soda:  But that’s not what it says online. 

Clerk: Oh. (silent for two beats while I imagine being forced back in the car, driving forever, falling asleep at the wheel, crashing, burning, etc.) I don’t see any cats here. You’re all set. Enjoy your stay. 

Day two

First. Dawn, coffee and gas stop in Ohio at a favorite stop.

Young guy in beat up shirt, torn jeans, scuffed work boots while we both are filling our coffee cups: If you’re looking for the half and half, it’s right here. (I said no but thanks.) Yeah. I drove all the way across town from XYZ because they didn’t have half and half. Love that stuff. 

Me: We humans are weird, aren’t we?

Him, grinning:  Got that right. You have a good day, Miss.  

Second. Walking out of same coffee place, two kids, middle schoolers maybe, see me coming, arms full of coffee and sandwiches. They smile, hold interior and exterior doors for me, and nod when I say thank you. 

There was kindness everywhere on the roads. From the only other car on the Ohio Turnpike also with Massachusetts plates that I traded lanes with for a hundred miles to the closed, traffic jammed sections where drivers motioned me to cut in front of them and  returned my thank you waves.

So minor, I know. But it all mattered because things got better. The roads lost their danger. The constant storm clouds gradually got less menacing. Noticing the small kindnesses made a huge difference. 

When I got to my ocean, 1,379 miles from the start the day before, I did the usual: stumbled from the car on half-wake legs and gave them a quick shake, then jogged over the shell-strewn sand to say hello to the mighty waves of her highness, the majestic Atlantic. Normally, I inhale the views and breathe in the salt for as long as it takes to bring my road-battered brain back to life. But today I had passengers waiting so I kept things brief. 

At the water, I bent down, ran fingertips through the waves, genuflected, and said a quick prayer of thanks. Not a practicing Catholic anymore, but some habits die hard. Those roads aren’t easy.  I’m grateful that on so many of these trips, things have mostly been good. 

The water sang and sparkled as two ferries on the horizon shining bright as clouds played tag, back and forth, back and forth. I saw my first shirtless runner of the season and for the first time in ages thought about running again. Maybe. 

Got back in the car fast because the beasties needed to stretch their legs too. 

A few minutes later, me and the cats -- Patrick, and David and Alexis Rose, were out of our cages. While the furry ones scrambled and sniffed at dusty corners and scratch-free-for-now upholstery, I got their food and water and their Gus all set. 

The food and water is by the back door so the cats can watch our squirrels and chipmunks while they eat. Gus is upstairs on my bureau next to my writing journal, a bunch of pens, a handful of coins, and three of my favorite running hats. 

I still have a ton to unpack. This morning I started that by writing. As always, it’s good to be home. 

 

 

 

 

 

Friday, May 15, 2026

The West Palm Beach Epstein Hearings #3: Courtney Wild - 'Maybe that's how it works for rich guys'

 What Jeffrey Epstein did to Courtney Wild was terrible. 

“But what happened to me after that by our own government changed my life just as much.”

Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at West Palm Beach City Hall, a group of Epstein sexual assault survivors gave testimony regarding their abuse and the government's response. I listened to this hearing, which lasted about three hours, while I was out on a long walk. 

The next morning, I was searching news sites for more information on the hearing and was surprised at how little was out there. This earth-shattering stuff about billionaire sexual assaults, massive government failure, and the stories of the women who survived all of this and are speaking truth to power took some serious time to find. 

Under one video, someone posted, “This is awful. Why aren’t we hearing more about this?” My exact thoughts. 

I went back and listened again to the hearings. Because I was now sitting at a table and not navigating roads, I was able to watch them too. I took notes and am doing my best to summarize and condense, one survivor at a time. 

I’m trying to avoid editorializing. It’s not my place. The point of this exercise is to share what the survivors said. This is my attempt to help get the word out. 

Each survivor spoke for roughly eight to ten minutes. My notes should take just a minute or two to skim, if you’re so inclined. Please watch the video too and correct me if I need correcting. It’s important to get this right. 


Courtney Wild’s seven-minute video begins at 33:00: (cut and paste link if necessary): https://www.youtube.com/live/fHntY5BVY90?si=ag85yR9MrzXJaI5V


Her primary reason for attending the hearing was to demand changes to the Crime Victims’ Rights Act. She explained how the present system of laws victimized her and other survivors and then made her demands. 

From age 14 to 17, Courtney Wild was abused by Jeffrey Epstein.  

“I’m here for one simple thing: to make sure this never happens again.”

“What happened to me was terrible, but what happened to me after that by our own government changed my life just as much.”

Before, during, and after the government signed the 2008 non-prosecution agreement with Epstein, Wild and other victims were gaslit. The agreement was signed behind closed doors. She and the other victims knew nothing about it. When she requested updates on the investigation of Epstein, the government continued sending her letters telling her to be patient, even though the case was already over. 

For years, she believed an investigation was ongoing, but that was not true. 

In 2008 she and her lawyer filed her case and that of forty other victims under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act. Resolving the case took ten years, until 2019. During that time Epstein was free to assault others. 

“We wanted to do the right thing for all victims. “

“We wanted answers to a simple question: How could this happen?”

Over the next decade, the communications between the government and Epstein “showed something I will never forget. The government wasn’t trying to negotiate with Epstein’s lawyers. It looked like the government was trying to make him happy.”

“They were making sure that the punishment they were going to give him was okay with him. It seemed like the government had forgotten that there were forty of us kids who had been abused by him. “

 “Where I come from, if you commit a crime you go to jail. I’ve never heard of the federal government letting the perpetrator decide what crimes to be charged with and checking. . . you’re cool with how long you’re going to spend in jail.”

“Maybe that’s how it works for rich guys.”

“After ten years of fighting, in 2019, a judge finally ruled that my rights and the rights of other victims were violated by the (2008) non-prosecution agreement. But there was nothing that could be done about it."

“The court found that the government violated the law. And nothing happened.”

That means that the law, the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, doesn’t matter. And if the law has no consequences, it doesn’t protect anybody.”

Wild says she was lucky that she had a lawyer willing to fight for her for over a decade. That is unusual. A lot of victims don’t have lawyers willing to fight for them for that long, especially in a case like this, where everyone tried to make them feel “crazy. “

“Fix the Crime Victims’ Rights Act so it will actually help victims. “

1. Clearly define “'meaningfully confer with victims.' I’m not sure what it means but I know it never happened for me.”

2. Real consequences and penalties. 

What shouldn’t happen: “After years and years of litigation nothing happens when you finally win and prove that your rights have been violated.” 

3. Record, memorialize, preserve victims' words. 

4. Provide attorney fee provisions so victims can find attorneys who will stand up for them. 

If these things had been in place, maybe all that happened to her and others would not have happened. 

“Do you know how many other girls Jeffrey Epstein abused during that time period?  I bet the FBI knows."

From the time of the non-disclosure agreement in 2008 to 2019, while Wild and others were petitioning for Epstein to be investigated and charged, Epstein, a registered sex offender, continued to abuse other girls in Florida, New York, New Mexico, and around the world "and everyone knew it. "

"There were so many lawsuits, so many articles during that time. He was a registered sex offender and still the government did nothing. Not until 2019 when he was finally arrested." 

None of those girls should have ever been abused. Epstein should have been in jail, like any other man would have been who committed the same crimes as him. There shouldn’t have been a single victim after 2009. 

“At the same time, I was petitioning the government on why he got the deal that he got, he was abusing other victims. That is the real injustice here.” 

At his bail hearing in 2019, Wild spoke to the judge, right in front of Epstein, and said how dangerous he was. Bail was denied and “I thought that at last we might finally get justice. “

A month later he was dead.

“Once again, the system failed us. Someone let him die in a secure prison, ensuring that he would never be held accountable for what he did to me, as a kid.” 

“Since then, there have been prosecutions but none of that changes what was lost .None of that fixes what was allowed to happen in the first place. I lost years of my life fighting this. So did many others. We did that so the next victim wouldn’t have to. Don’t let this be in vain. Let the Crime Victims’ Rights Act matter.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Epstein West Palm Beach survivor hearing #2: Virginia Giuffre's family

 “ ‘I don’t recall’ is not enough.” 

Tuesday, May 12, 2026, at West Palm Beach City Hall, a group of Epstein sexual assault survivors gave testimony regarding their abuse and the government's response. I listened to this hearing, which lasted about three hours, while I was out on a long walk. 

The next morning, I was searching news sites for more information on the hearing and was surprised at how little was out there. This earth-shattering stuff about billionaire sexual assaults, massive government failure, and the stories of the women who survived all of this and are speaking truth to power took some serious time to find. 

Under one video, someone posted, “This is awful. Why aren’t we hearing more about this?” My exact thoughts. 

I went back and listened again to the hearings. Because I was now sitting at a table and not navigating roads, I was able to watch them too. I took notes and am doing my best to summarize and condense, one survivor at a time. 

I’m trying to avoid editorializing. It’s not my place. The point of this exercise is to share what the survivors said. This is my attempt to help get the word out. 

Each survivor spoke for roughly eight to ten minutes. My notes should take just a minute or two to skim, if you’re so inclined. Please watch the video too and correct me if I need correcting. It’s important to get this right. 

 

 

This post is a summary of the words of Sky and Amanda Roberts. Sky is a younger brother of the late Virginia Giuffre. Amanda is his wife.

Their six-minute video begins at 25:12:(cut and paste link): https://www.youtube.com/live/fHntY5BVY90?si=ag85yR9MrzXJaI5V

Sky and Amanda Roberts, on behalf of the late Virginia Giuffre.  

In summer 2000, Virginia was 16 years old and had just finished her sophomore year in high school. She was working at Mar-a-Lago and was recruited from there by Ghislaine Maxwell. 

Before she died, she gave testimony speaking out against what Sky called a “Global sex trafficking operation enabled, protected, and funded by powerful people."

“Many survivors stay silent because many of the perpetrators hold power, wealth, and influence in our society. Point blank period. That is dangerous. No survivor should have to risk their own safety just to be believed. But Virginia, she did it anyway.”

“She stood up when others were afraid. Told the truth under oath. And faced people she knew were powerful.”

“She believed accountability should reach everyone involved, no matter their status or influence.”

He quoted from her sworn 5/3/16 deposition, describing this as “one of the thousands of stories that still remain untold,” then read from the transcript:

Virginia: “They trafficked me to many people.” 

“Okay. Please name a person that Ghislaine Maxwell directed you to have sex with.”

Virginia: “Prince Andrew.”

“Okay. Who else?”

Virginia: “As a whole, they both trafficked me to many people.”

She was asked to list others. She listed Glenn Dubin (an American billionaire hedge fund manager). The name after that was redacted. Then Steve Kaufman. Alan Dershowitz (lawyer and Harvard Law School professor). 

Sky: “The question isn’t that the names exist. The question is what Congress and the Department of Justice will do about it.” 

Will there finally be investigations and accountability?

Next, his wife, Amanda Roberts, spoke. She said they are talking about millions of records and evidence that points to a network that is much more than just Epstein and Maxwell and that affected over 1.200 girls, women, and boys. 

Epstein and Maxwell didn’t act alone, and Palm Beach was the blueprint, the “center for expansion.” When the DOJ says, “nothing to see here,” survivors know that this is a coverup. 

She quoted from Virginia’s book, Nobody’s Girl: “Don’t be fooled by those in Epstein’s circle who say they didn’t know what Epstein was doing.”

The phrase: “I don’t recall” is not enough. 

Calls out Les Wexner and demands he be investigated. Said Howard Lutnick’s changing accounts about his association with Epstein deserve scrutiny, resignations, and investigations. 

Says Todd Blanche’s decision to move Maxwell to a minimum-security prison shortly after meeting with her demands investigation. 

Roberts said:

1. Congress must hold this DOJ accountable for violating the law. 

2. State investigations must continue and expand in NM, NY, FL, Virgin Islands, and everywhere this network operated. 

3. This committee must issue further subpoenas and must require alleged co-conspirators to testify under oath. 

4. Investigators must follow the money. Financial records are not secondary. They are the key to exposing the whole network. Shell companies, tax violations, money laundering, all of it must be investigated aggressively. Financial crimes can open the door to more prosecutions. 

“The Epstein and Maxwell investigations must be re-opened. Not partially, not quietly, but fully. Enablers must no longer be allowed to hide behind wealth, power, silence."