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Epstein Victim’s Suspicious Death Calls for DOJ to Release Epstein Files

Epstein Victim’s Suspicious Death Calls for DOJ to Release Epstein Files

Last Thursday, the news of Epstein’s victim Virginia Giuffre’s death made headlines. Her death, allegedly by suicide at her home in Australia, came a few weeks after she posted online about a terrible accident that had left her with just days to live. Was Giuffre’s death really a suicide or yet another murder of a potential witness in the Epstein legacy of sexual crimes against minors?

Giuffre had accused Epstein and his accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell of sex trafficking her after Maxwell recruited her to work for Epstein. She had stated that Maxwell met her at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago in the year 2000, where Giuffre, 16-year-old then, worked as a spa attendant. Giuffre had accused British Prince Andrew of having sex with her three times when she was 17. In 2022, Prince Andrew settled with Giuffre out of court for $12 million. In 2019, Giuffre had publicly stated that she was not suicidal in any way.

“Too many evil people want to see me quieted,” she had tweeted.

The official results of the investigation into Giuffre’s death are not available yet. But it is widely speculated that she did not kill herself, just like Epstein did not kill himself. Giuffre’s suspicious death comes at a time when Trump’s Department of Justice (DOJ) is facing consistent demands from conservatives to release the Epstein files and let the world know the names of his clients, the child abusers and traffickers. But the DOJ is ignoring these voices.

Republican Congressman James Comer, who is the House Oversight Committee Chairman, recently told independent journalist Sharyl Attkisson that he keeps getting the same response from the DOJ on the Epstein files, saying they can’t release the files as it’s an ongoing investigation. He added that AG Pam Bondi has walked into an agency that is hostile to her.

Conservative journalist and commentator Laura Loomer, who has repeatedly asked for the DOJ to release the Epstein files, posted on X that it’s been 100 days since the Trump administration officially took charge, multiple Epstein victims are dead by now, and we still haven’t seen the Epstein files despite being promised that it was going to happen on Day One.

Last week, Tom Fitton of Judicial Watch posted an update in a short video about his organization’s lawsuit against the DOJ for the release of the Epstein records. Fitton told that he received a response from Bondi’s office the same day the lawsuit was filed to get the files and it was, in his words, a “strange Bondi DOJ response” that didn’t make any sense.

The release of the Epstein files has become the biggest failure to date of the Trump-appointed DOJ and large numbers of MAGA voters continue to express their daily disappointment over the secrecy and silence the DOJ has maintained about the files. With Virginia Giuffre’s death, the question of whether Bondi’s DOJ will release the full records before any other victims suspiciously lose their lives is on every caring person’s mind. One such person, Juliette Rose Bryant, has already gone on record to say she is not suicidal.

On her X page, Bryant posted a video that included her statement that she is not suicidal nor will ever be and that the deaths of several victims of Epstein including Giuffre’s are beyond suspicious. She also asked why the Trump administration is not releasing the Epstein client list despite promising it on the campaign trail.

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