Pam Bondi’s Justice Department released some of the missing files from the Epstein investigation of a woman who accused Donald Trump of sexual abuse when she was a minor.
The files released are 16 of the 53 pages that NPR’s investigation found were missing from the public file. According to NPR, the 37 pages still missing would include notes from the interviews, a law enforcement report and license records.
The new documents go into more detail about how the accuser met and interacted with Epstein when she was 13-15 years old.
A FBI email summary and a DOJ PowerPoint slide deck note that the accuser claimed she met Trump around 1983 through Epstein, when she claims Trump “subsequently forced her head down to his exposed penis which she subsequently bit. In response, Trump punched her in the head and kicked her out.”
In the newly-published documents, the woman’s described how Trump allegedly put her head “down to his penis” and she “bit the s*** out of it.” She alleged that Trump struck her and said something to the effect of “get this little b**** the hell out of here.”
During the final interview the woman had with the FBI in 2019, when asked whether she “felt comfortable detailing her contacts with Trump,” she reportedly asked “what the point would be of providing the information at this point in her life when there was a strong possibility nothing could be done about it.”
The newly released files reveal no information about how credible investigators found her claims, and provided no context. The files were included in a slide presentation that summarized the cases against Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
The White House and its spokespeople claim that the information exonerates the president.
Karoline Leavitt called the allegations “completely baseless accusations, backed by zero credible evidence, from a sadly disturbed woman who has an extensive criminal history.”
