Skip to main content

Epstein Files: 13 Year Old Reporting of the Murder of her Newborn

This is an FBI FD-302 interview report (an agent’s summary of an interview). Large portions are redacted, but the readable parts indicate the following:
Agency: Federal Bureau of Investigation
Classification: Unclassified
Date of report: 03/13/2020
Interview date/time: 03/09/2020, ~5:11 PM (ET)
Location: New York (field office context implied)
Subject: Redacted (appears to be a witness/victim interview)
Substance of the interview (paraphrased)
The interviewee says they had previously provided a tip weeks earlier.
They describe sexual abuse and trafficking connected to Jeffrey Epstein.
They state they were recruited/abused while underage (mentions being 13–14 years old).
They reference being trafficked, multiple victims, and patterns of abuse.
The interviewee discusses knowledge of other girls, logistics, and how abuse was facilitated.
They say they have no financial motive and are speaking to provide information.
There is mention of other reporting to authorities and prior contacts.
Names, locations, and corroborating details are blacked out.

FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION

Intake

Date: 08/03/2020

Case ID #: 500-NY-3027371 (U) EPSTEIN, JEFFREY; CHILD SEX TRAFFICKING

Drafted By: [REDACTED]

Date/Time Received: 08/03/2020 05:11 PM EDT

Details: On 08/03/2020, at 5:11 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, [REDACTED], date of birth [REDACTED], email address [REDACTED], address [REDACTED], Los Lunas, NM 87031, cellular telephone number [REDACTED], Internet Protocol (IP) address [REDACTED], which resolves at Albuquerque, NM 87114, submitted an online tip to the FBI National Threat Operations Center (NTOC) via tips.fbi.gov to report a follow-up tip regarding being a victim of Jeffrey Epstein.

NOTE: [REDACTED] is real name and AKA name is [REDACTED].

Date Submitted: 08/03/2020 05:11:11 PM ET

Transaction Number: 6916ABD0-1FZ1-4719-9BFC-00006B42A613

Threat To Life: False

Submitted Text: I previously provided a tip about 3 weeks ago, maybe 4 weeks ago, under an alias I have for myself, [REDACTED]. All the other details of the previous tip match all the information given in today's tip, except I am giving my real name. A detective from NYPD FBI sex trafficking task force called me a couple of weeks ago from a 212 area code number. I talked to him for about 20 or 30 minutes about my being sex trafficked by my uncle and Jeffrey Epstein in 1984 while I was 13 and pregnant. I told him some other important information about other high profile individuals involved in my sex trafficking and the murder and disposal of my newborn daughter because I gave birth to her while in the middle of this sex trafficking ordeal. I cannot remember the detective’s name nor do I have a number

UNCLASSIFIED

Summary of the Content

​The document records a tip from an individual claiming to be a victim of a sex trafficking ring involving Jeffrey Epstein and a family member in 1984. The claimant states they had previously provided information under an alias and were following up to provide their legal identity and details regarding a previous conversation with a task force detective.

Popular posts from this blog

Why people question the Epstein jail video

https://youtube.com/shorts/Piu5hPMc9aU?si=v03D82WtugPn8tBv BONDI says on Video above only 1 minute was missing but that's not what analysts say it was nearly 3 minutes.  When the DOJ released surveillance video from outside Jeffrey Epstein’s jail cell, officials said about 1 minute was missing , blaming an old recording system resetting at midnight. They also described the footage as “raw.” Later, independent experts examined the video’s technical data. Their analysis showed the file was stitched together from multiple clips and that nearly 3 minutes (about 2:53) from an original source clip were not included in the version released to the public. That nearly 3-minute gap is separate from and larger than the 1-minute gap the DOJ acknowledged. This matters because it means there’s a difference between: what the DOJ said was missing (1 minute), and what the technical evidence suggests was missing (3 minutes). The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is the watchdog that...

Death of Jean-Luc Brunel: Official Findings and Investigative Summary of Epstein Associate

On February 19, 2022, Jean-Luc Brunel, a prominent French model scout and former associate of Jeffrey Epstein, was found dead in his cell at La Santé Prison in Paris. His death occurred while he was awaiting trial on several charges, including the rape of minors and sex trafficking. ​Key Findings of the Investigation ​Following the discovery of his body, the Paris prosecutor's office launched a standard inquiry into the cause of death. The final investigative findings concluded: ​ Primary Cause: Suicide by hanging. ​ Time of Discovery: Approximately 1:30 a.m. local time. ​ Method: Brunel used bedsheets as a ligature. ​ Cell Status: He was alone in his cell at the time of the incident. Reports indicated there were no surveillance cameras inside the individual cells to record the event, which is consistent with standard privacy regulations in French "VIP" wings. ​ Medical History: Investigators noted that Brunel had attempted suicide ...

THE MAN BEHIND THE MIRROR: NIGEL OAKES AND THE CUSTODIANS OF INFLUENCE

LONDON — In the high-stakes world of psychological warfare and data-driven elections, few names carry as much quiet weight as Nigel Oakes. As the founder of SCL Group—the parent company to the infamous Cambridge Analytica—Oakes has spent decades operating at the intersection of British royalty, global power brokers, and the controversial art of "mind-bending" influence. ​From Eton to the Palace ​Oakes’ journey into the heart of the establishment began long before the era of big data. An Old Etonian, Oakes first made headlines in the 1980s not for politics, but for his proximity to the British Royal Family. During a highly publicized relationship with Lady Helen Windsor—daughter of the Duke of Kent and cousin to Prince Andrew—Oakes became a fixture in the royal social circuit. ​Reports from the era often depicted Oakes as a suave, if slightly rebellious, figure within the "Sloane Ranger" set, famously rumored to have been smuggled into royal residences. It was wi...