Epstein Survivors Testify in Closed-Door Session, Urge Full Transparency on Files

On September 2, 2025, survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking network shared harrowing personal accounts during a closed-door roundtable with the House Oversight Committee, emphasizing the need for full transparency in the ongoing investigations. The session, organized by bipartisan lawmakers including Reps. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), featured survivors detailing years of abuse, institutional betrayals, and the lasting trauma inflicted by Epstein and his enablers like Ghislaine Maxwell. Committee members, including Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), who is a survivor of sexual abuse herself, stressed that these testimonies underscore systemic failures in holding powerful figures accountable, calling for unredacted files to expose any deep-state protections for elites.


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Lawmakers’ Reactions

Rep. Nancy Mace (R-S.C.), a recent sexual assault survivor, left the briefing early due to a severe panic attack triggered by the survivors’ stories, later posting on X that she experienced sweating, hyperventilating, shaking, and difficulty breathing while empathizing with their fight for justice. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) described the revelations as far larger than anticipated, stating after speaking with survivors that “rich and powerful people need to go to prison” and speculating that Epstein may have been a foreign intelligence asset, possibly tied to networks protecting high-profile individuals. Pressley, following the meeting, demanded a public congressional hearing to center survivors’ voices in the record, criticizing the administration for shielding abusers rather than prioritizing victims. These reactions from both Republican and Democratic members fueled bipartisan outrage, with Massie praying House Speaker Mike Johnson would heed the survivors’ pleas and stop blocking votes on full file releases.

Survivor Demands

Up to 100 survivors are planning a rally near the Capitol ahead of the September 3, 10:30AM ET press conference. Their unified call for the Epstein Files Transparency Act aims to force the release of all records, protecting victim privacy while exposing potential corruption among elites. 

You can catch up on the prior development in the Epstein coverage here: DOJ, FBI conclude Epstein has “no client list”, committed suicide