There are crime victims who’ve told their stories publicly and to court records.
Jeffrey Epstein survivor Jess Michaels on her story and the importance and impact of the recent news Katie Couric Jul 28, 2025 I talked to a friend. I said, “I’m really scared to go back to New York.” And I couldn’t verbalize why, but as soon as I got back to New York, I was out of that apartment within 24 hours. I moved out of New York City. I never spoke to her again. And she never reached back out to me again either. I thought I was the only one because I thought my friend would never do that. My friend would never That can’t possibly be happening to her because she would never. So I thought it was just me. I thought I was the only one.
There’s a documentary which interviews survivors available for streaming currently on Kanopy, the steaming app that you can access with a library card. There are also civil case documents where there are women who have told the public, the legal system, what happened to them and who did it.
What’s just depraved is how there are people online tut tutting people for caring about this because they don’t think it’s helpful from a strategic political position against Trump. These people are making asses of themselves with such talk in public. This is exactly what people don’t like about politics and politicians and political operatives. It’s extremely off-putting. I actually heard someone on a podcast that critiques right-wing ideas suggest that there’s an equivalence between the Jeffrey Epstein files and the twitter files and basically suggesting this is a conspiracy theory cooked up from Elon Musk because he likes to fall back on abuse allegations like he did with the cave rescue incident. This kind of “analysis of the right-wing” is beyond off-putting, and it’s just as bad as equating it all to the pizzagate conspiracy fiction.
