Sept. 3 (UPI) — Survivors of convicted sex-trafficker Jeffrey Epstein, flanked by lawmakers and lawyers, spoke out at a press conference on Capital Hill Wednesday.
President Donald Trump, meanwhile, called the fight for the Epstein files a “Democrat hoax.”
Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., called on Republicans in the House to support the survivors by signing his discharge petition to force a vote to release all the files. But House GOP leaders are pushing members to avoid the petition and support the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, which is working for disclosures from the Department of Justice, The Hill reported.
In a closed-door meeting in the Capitol, Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., called on GOP lawmakers to instead support the efforts of the Oversight and Government Reform Committee, led by Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., which is seeking more disclosures on the Epstein case from the DOJ, the Epstein estate, and former law enforcement officials who worked on the case.
Massie said of Comer’s committee, “They’re allowing the DOJ to curate all of the information that the DOJ is giving them.”
“I hope my colleagues are watching this press conference,” Massie said. “Hopefully today we’ll get two more signatures on the discharge petition, that’s all we need.”
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., said she and the others would fight for the victims.
“Today, we are coming forward and we are going to fight like hell for these women, because we have to fight like hell for those that are enduring sexual abuse and are living in a prison of shame,” Greene said.
Trump said in a meeting Wednesday with the president of Poland to a reporter, “So this is a Democrat hoax that never ends. You know, it reminds me a little of the Kennedy situation [assassination], we gave them everything. Over and over again. More and more and more. And nobody’s ever satisfied.”
He said Democrats are trying to distract from his successes as president.
“I know that no matter what you do, it’s going to keep going,” the president said of the focus on the Epstein files.
“I think we’re probably having, according to what I read, even from two people in this room, we’re having the most successful eight months of any president ever,” he said. “And that’s what I want to talk about. That’s what we should be talking about. Not the Epstein hoax.”
Brad Edwards, who represents some of the victims, responded, urging Trump to join the survivors.
“Back in 2009 and several times after that, [Trump] didn’t think that it was a hoax then. In fact, he helped me. He got on the phone, he told me things that were helping our investigation. Our investigation wasn’t looking into him, but he was helping us then,” Edwards said. “So at this point in time, I would hope that he would revert back to what he was saying to get elected, which is, ‘I want transparency.'”
One of Epstein’s survivors, Chauntae Davies, said Epstein was very proud of his friendship with Trump.
“His biggest brag, forever, was that he was very good friends with Donald Trump. He had an 8-by-10 framed picture of him on his desk with the two of them,” Davies said.
Several victims expressed their pain and frustration with the lack of transparency and support at the event.
“Why was he so protected? And why didn’t anyone ever care to stop him?” survivor Haley Robson asked.
She urged lawmakers to “lift the curtain on these files and be transparent.”
Marina Lacerda said she was “one of dozens of girls that I personally know who was forced into Jeffrey mansion … when we were just kids,” CBS News reported.
Lacerda said she was 14 when she met Epstein, after being told she could earn $300 “to give an older guy a massage.”
“It went from a dream job to the worst nightmare,” Lacerda said.
She said she had “no way out … until he finally told me that I was too old.”
Lacerda questioned why Epstein was able to “go on with the abuse,” saying she could have testified earlier on to “help stop him.”
“Our government could have saved so many women, but Jeffrey Epstein was too important and those women didn’t matter,” Lacerda said. “Why? Well we matter now. We are here today, and we are speaking, and we are not going to stop speaking.”
A lawyer for some of the victims, Brittany Henderson, said the women want transparency and protection.
“The women here represent hundreds of other women who we have spoken to, many of whom were trafficked from other countries — from eastern European countries — where women don’t have the rights that we have here, women don’t have the protections that we have here. And those women are terrified that their names will be released in those files.”
Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., who is working with Massie on the discharge petition, said, “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 there are “corrupt, special-interest forces” blocking the release of the full files, saying “There is something that is rotten in Washington.”
Survivor Jena-Lisa Jones said, “Together, we can finally make a change.”
“Whether you are a Democrat or a Republican, this does not matter,” Jones said. “This is not about sides.”
One survivor, Teresa Helm, spoke out against the interview that Attorney General Todd Blanche conducted with Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.
“Her voice was elevated way before our voices were elevated here today. And that same calm, manipulative voice that she had, so polite there that day with Todd Blanche, was the same, polite, coercive, manipulative voice that I heard as she was grooming me to then send me off to the home of Jeffrey Epstein, where he would assault me.”
She criticized Blanche’s failure to counter what Maxwell said.
“Does he even have the facts to be able to push back on her? We could sit there and push back. Why didn’t we get to attend that? Why weren’t we there that day? Or why wasn’t even one of us consulted prior to that day in that meeting?” she asked.
“We all work very hard on healing and [Maxwell’s voice] still gets to us after two decades,” she said.
Annie Farmer, a survivor who testified at Maxwell’s trial, said that there are two Americas.
“At a time with record high levels of distrust in our institutions, and a perception that there are two Americas — one for those with power and privilege and one for everyone else, passing this Epstein transparency bill is one important step that can be taken to prove to Americans that the government does not side with sexual perpetrators,” Farmer said.
Anouska De Georgiou, another survivor, said the issue is secrecy.
She called the discharge petition “so essential,” saying it’s “about ending secrecy wherever abuse of power takes root.”
“The only motive for opposing this bill would be to conceal wrongdoing,” she said.
Massie voiced the same concern.
“What’s clear is they’re not redacting just to protect victims; they are redacting to protect reputations,” Massie said. “Some of those people are probably innocent, but some of them are most certainly guilty.”