Epstein Survivors Vow to Make Their Own Client List as House Probe Escalates
Survivors accuse the government of withholding information and plan to publicly release a list of alleged powerful associates involved in Epstein's trafficking network.
- On Wednesday at the U.S. Capitol, Lisa Phillips, Epstein survivor and model, announced survivors will confidentially compile names of powerful associates regularly in the Epstein world.
- On July 7, the Department of Justice announced it found no evidence of a client list and said no further Epstein records will be released, following a 33,000-page dump by the House Oversight Committee.
- Historically, four women who worked for Epstein were granted immunity in 2008, including Sarah Kellen Vickers who scheduled appointments and paid girls $200-$300, Lesley Groff who set up high-level meetings, Nadia Marcinko, and Adriana Ross who invoked her Fifth Amendment and flew with Bill Clinton.
- Victims pressed lawmakers and said they will act if DOJ refuses, while Reps. Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna's House discharge petition requires 218 votes and is close but not there as of Wednesday.
- The DOJ/FBI memo found no evidence of a client list, while less than 1% of Epstein files have been released amid a 33,000-page dump survivors call heavily redacted and unusable.
Insights by Ground AI
Does this summary seem wrong?
17 Articles
17 Articles
Despite their frustration with the Trump government, they will let him decide whether or not to publish them.
·Montreal, Canada
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources17
Leaning Left5Leaning Right6Center3Last UpdatedBias Distribution43% Right
Bias Distribution
- 43% of the sources lean Right
43% Right
L 36%
C 21%
R 43%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium