Resurfaced is a portion of a transcript containing testimony from the late Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims, which contradicts the Democratic Party’s claim that President Donald Trump is involved in the late financier’s illicit behavior with minor females.
The transcript shows Giuffre, who died by suicide earlier this year, being questioned about Trump’s involvement with Epstein and whether or not he engaged in any illegal sexual activities with underage females.
In her testimony, Guiffre said she didn’t recall ever seeing Trump and Epstein together, that the future president never “flirted” with her or made any sexual advances, and that Trump never went to Epstein’s homes in New York, New Mexico, or to the infamous island where so much sexual abuse of minors reportedly took place.
The resurfaced testimony clearing Trump comes as the left-wing mainstream media and Democrats have been demanding the administration release information regarding Epstein and his alleged ‘client list,’ implying that the president may have been involved in bad behavior.
It should be noted that the same Democrats and media outlets expressed zero interest in the information or Epstein’s past alleged crimes during President Joe Biden’s four-year term.
The Trump administration on Tuesday pressed two federal judges to unseal grand jury testimony from the cases that led to the indictments of the late financier Jeffrey Epstein and British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell on sex trafficking charges, amid ongoing public concern over the administration’s handling of the matter.
The Justice Department initially requested permission on July 18 to release transcripts of the confidential witness testimony given years earlier in both cases. However, U.S. District Judges Richard Berman and Paul Engelmayer, based in Manhattan, asked prosecutors to provide more detailed legal justifications for the move.
In a pair of court filings submitted just before midnight, federal prosecutors argued that unsealing the records was warranted due to the “abundant public interest” in the Epstein case and the continued scrutiny of how it was managed by federal authorities, Reuters reported.
The Epstein case has long been a focal point for conspiracy theories, and in recent months, President Trump has faced growing pressure to declassify documents related to the federal investigations into Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
Epstein died by suicide in jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, according to the official autopsy. He had pleaded not guilty. Maxwell, his longtime associate, was convicted in 2021 on multiple sex trafficking charges and is currently serving a 20-year sentence in Florida. She also pleaded not guilty and is now appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn her conviction.
Earlier this month, Trump said he directed Attorney General Pam Bondi to pursue the release of grand jury transcripts in both cases. His announcement came after the Justice Department concluded that Epstein’s death was a suicide and that there was no incriminating client list—a finding that angered many of Trump’s conservative supporters, who suspect a cover-up involving Epstein’s ties to wealthy and influential figures and believe he may have been murdered in custody, the report said.
Grand juries, which operate in secrecy, are convened by prosecutors to hear testimony and determine whether criminal charges should be filed. Their proceedings are typically sealed, with only limited exceptions allowing for public disclosure, Reuters noted.
Even if the judges approve the release of the transcripts, it remains unclear whether the documents would reveal new or significant information. Much of the key testimony—including accounts from alleged victims, associates of Epstein and Maxwell, and law enforcement officials—was already made public during Maxwell’s four-week trial in 2021.