DoJ/FBI cover-up continues. MI5 may have weighed in.
On Sunday, I reported that the FBI interviewed a victim who accused President Donald Trump of sexually and violently assaulting her when she was 13-15 years old. I also reported that some of the Justice Department’s case files for this woman — who later sued and reportedly received a settlement from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate for sexual abuse allegations in the same timeframe — appear to be missing from the government’s publicly searchable Epstein database.
However, I have now found DOJ records showing that the FBI did not just interview this woman once. The FBI interviewed this woman — who claimed that Trump forced her to give him oral sex when she was in her early teens, then punched her in the head after she bit his penis and kicked her out — at least four times.
But the DOJ’s file associated with those records — a document cataloguing information that the government provided counsel for convicted Epstein co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell during her trial — has apparently been removed.
This revelation adds to the mounting pile of evidence undermining statements from Attorney General Pam Bondi and other senior administration officials assuring the public that the Epstein file release has been transparent, complete, and bereft of any evidence implicating Trump in wrongdoing.
But my initial report also raised questions about files associated with the victim’s case number — 3501.045 — that do not appear to be in the Epstein database. In other words, the case seems to be incomplete.
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@SeanOhhhh
's post juxtaposes Elon Musk's February 17, 2026, statement affirming Jesus' teachings with a ominous warning, using a screenshot to imply hypocrisy amid recent scandals.
- It references the U.S. Department of Justice's late January 2026 release of over 3 million Epstein files, which detail Musk's previously undisclosed ties to Jeffrey Epstein, including 2012-2013 emails planning island visits and active correspondence.
- The post's 48,000+ likes and replies underscore public skepticism toward Musk's religious pivot, with users citing the files' evidence of his Epstein links—such as rejecting an invitation but maintaining contact—as a stark contrast to Christian values.