October 8, 2025

“ It is not a hoax ”: Epstein survivors describe sexual abuse because they call for justice and transparency

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The survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse made their votes on Capitol Hill on Wednesday, put pressure on American legislators to force the release of the investigation into sex trafficking on the deceased financial and push the efforts of President Donald Trump to reject the question as a “hoax”.

During a press conference on the Capitol lawn who attracted hundreds of supporters and songs to “release the files”, women shared – some publicly for the first time – how they were attracted to Epstein abuses by her former girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell.

They demanded that the Trump administration will ensure the transparency and responsibility for what they endured in adolescence.

“It is not a supporter,” said Ashley Routh, “but it’s very political.”

The self -proclaimed survivor of Epstein and Maxwell said that adult catalysts too long have actively closed the abuses that take place behind closed doors.

A woman with long hair and sunglasses speaks on the exterior podium
The survivor Ashley RURBRIGHT speaks during the rally. (Elizabeth Frantz / Reuters)

“You know who you are,” said Rucky. “Like us.”

‘Not a hoax’

It was a striking stand because the push for the disclosure of the so-called Epstein files reached a pivotal moment in Washington.

The legislators are fighting on how the congress should delve into the Epstein saga while the Republican president, after initially reported support for transparency on the campaign track, rejected the issue as a “democrat hoax”.

“No matter what you do, it will continue,” said Trump on Wednesday. He added: “Really, I think it’s enough.”

A white panel with a black reading lettering that I stand with the survivors, is held in a backdrop of the Capitol Building
The demonstrators gathered at a press conference at the Congress to publish all Jeffrey Epstein’s files outside the American Capitol on Wednesday. (Kevin Wolf / The Associated Press)

But the survivors of Capitol Hill, as well as at least one of the closest allies of Trump in Congress, did not agree. Some women pleaded for Trump to support their cause.

“It is not a hoax. We are real human beings. It is a real trauma,” said Haley Robson, one of the survivors who said that she was a recorded republican. She invited Trump to meet her in person.

The woman in white with sunglasses speaks on a podium that carries a sign that says that Epstein transparency files.
Haley Robson invited Donald Trump to meet her so that she can help her see that the history of survivors is not a hoax. (Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)

‘No way’

Epstein died in a Manhattan prison while waiting for the trial in 2019 for having declared that they have abused and sexually treated dozens of minor girls. The case was brought more than a decade after secretly concluded an agreement with federal prosecutors in Florida to eliminate almost identical allegations. Epstein was accused of paying minor girls hundreds of dollars in cash for massages, then attacking them.

“The only reason I am here is because I have the impression that people who count in this country finally care about what we have to say,” said Marina Lacerda, an immigrant from Brazil who met Epstein at the age of 14 after a friend told her that she could win hundreds of dollars to have an older man. She said she was forced to work for Epstein until the age of 17.

“I had no way out,” she said, “until he told me that I was too old.”

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Marina Lacerda spoke at a press conference on Wednesday on the abuses she says that she suffered from Jeffrey Epstein from 14 years old. She said that she had trouble remembering parts of the traumatic experience and the publication of darling -related financial files could help her “put the elements of my own life”.

Maxwell, confidant and former Epstein girlfriend, was sentenced in 2021 and sentenced to 20 years in prison to attract adolescent girls for him. Four women testified during her trial that they had been mistreated by Epstein in adolescence in the 1990s and in the early 2000s in her houses in Florida, New York and the New Mexico. The allegations also caused dozens of prosecution.

Some Republicans defy party leadership

Republican representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, who is generally closely aligned with Trump, described his support for a bill which would oblige the United States justice to disclose the information it has compiled on Epstein as a moral struggle against sexual predation.

“It is not a political party or the other. It is a culmination of everyone who works (ING) to silence these women and protect Jeffrey Epstein and his cabal,” said Greene at the press conference.

A politician wearing blue stands on a podium while a woman behind her wips her eyes.
The representative Marjorie Taylor Greene speaks while Haley Robson reacts behind her during a press conference to discuss the bill on the transparency of Epstein files. (Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)

She is one of the four Republicans – including three women – who have challenged the republican management of the Chamber and the White House in order to force a vote on their bill. The president of the room, Mike Johnson, tries to cancel the effort by proposing his own resolution and arguing that a simultaneous investigation of the Chamber’s supervisory committee is the best way for the congress to provide transparency.

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During a press conference on Wednesday outside the American Capitol, Virginia Giuffre’s brother, the late Jeffrey Epstein, urged legislators to support a bill that would publish all the files related to the condemned sex offender. “These are justice against the rich and powerful who stole something from these women and many children at the time – their freedom,” said Sky Roberts.

Tuesday evening, this committee published on Tuesday evening what he said to be the first group of documents and files he received from the Ministry of Justice on the Epstein affair. The files – published on Google Drive – contained hundreds of image files of the judicial files elderly to Epstein, but were practically nothing new.

Meanwhile, the White House warned of the members of the House that the support of the bill required that the Ministry of Justice put the files would be considered a hostile act. Representative Thomas Massie, a Kentucky Republican who puts pressure on the bill, said that the White House sent this message because “they dug”.

Woman with long brown hair with long
Jess Michaels, another Epstein victim, said the survivors demanded truth and responsibility. (Elizabeth Frantz / Reuters)

“They decided that they did not want it to be released,” he said. “It’s a political threat.”

But with Trump sending a strong message and republican leaders to move forward with alternative resolution, Massie was left in search of support for at least two other Republicans ready to cross political lines. Six Republican members would take, as well as all the Democrats in the House, to force a vote on their bill. And even if it passes the room, he would always need to pass the Senate and be signed by Trump.

However, the survivors saw this moment as their best chance in the years to court with regard to Epstein.

“Justice and responsibility are not favors on the part of the powerful. These are late obligations,” said Jess Michaels, a survivor who said she was abused by Epstein in 1991, at the Capitol lawn rally. “This moment began with Epstein’s crimes. But it will remain memories for the survivors demanding justice, demanding the truth, demanding responsibility.”


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