
Today, a batch of private emails from the late financier Jeffrey Epstein was released by Democrats on the United States House Committee on Oversight and Reform. The correspondence, sent by Epstein to author Michael Wolff between 2011 and 2019, contained explosive claims regarding President Donald Trump’s awareness of Epstein’s misconduct.

In one email, Epstein wrote that “of course [Trump] knew about the girls” because he had asked Maxwell to stop. Another message described Trump as the “dog that hasn’t barked” in relation to Epstein’s activities, suggesting complicity or at least knowledge of wrongdoing.
House Oversight Committee Democrats said the materials were provided by Epstein’s estate and urged a full public release of additional files. The documents are limited in contextual detail — the timeline of the emails, the identity of the recipients beyond Wolff, and the full scope of Epstein’s claims remain unclear.
The Trump camp has not offered a substantive response to the disclosures, though the White House was contacted for comment. Legal experts caution that claims in private emails are not proof of criminal conduct. They say investigators will need to verify origins, authenticity, and corroborate the statements with independent evidence.
Nevertheless, these revelations add another dimension to the high-profile Epstein scandal, raising fresh questions about associations between powerful figures and the disgraced financier. As new documents emerge, the political and legal implications could ripple across Washington and beyond.
This story is developing and may be updated as more information becomes available.
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