Newly Released Epstein Files Contain Accusation Of Donald Trump Forcing Underage Girl To Do Heinous Act
Written by b87fm on 02/02/2026

Donald and Melania Trump both attended the film’s premiere at the Kennedy Center
A new batch of documents tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation includes unverified allegations referencing President Donald Trump, raising immediate questions about credibility, context, and legal relevance.
The materials—part of thousands of additional records released by the Department of Justice—include FBI summaries dated August 2025 that reference claims made by individuals during a broader investigation into the Alexander brothers, three wealthy Florida siblings currently on trial on sex-trafficking charges. The documents do not charge Trump with any crime and do not indicate that the allegations were substantiated.
According to one FBI summary, an individual alleged that she was coerced into performing a sexual act involving Trump roughly 35 years ago in New Jersey, when she was approximately 13 or 14 years old. The document states the claim was relayed second-hand to investigators and includes graphic assertions. The file does not indicate corroborating evidence, and no criminal case is referenced in connection with Trump.
The summary was circulated as part of an internal FBI email chain dated August 6–7, 2025. The FBI leadership referenced in the file has not publicly commented on the substance of the allegations.
The same document set also includes a separate allegation from another woman who claimed she was trafficked as a minor in the 1980s and forced into sexual acts involving high-profile individuals, including Trump. Investigators noted they were unable to locate or contact the complainant, and no charges resulted from the claim.
Additional files reference an online complainant who alleged the existence of a sex-trafficking operation at the Trump National Golf Club in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, during the mid-1990s, naming Ghislaine Maxwell as a facilitator. Federal authorities later deemed that claim not credible, according to the documents.
The records were released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed into law by Trump on November 19, which mandated the Department of Justice to disclose its Epstein-related materials within 30 days. Until this release, only a limited portion of the government’s Epstein records had been made public.
Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide in a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges. Ghislaine Maxwell, his longtime associate, is currently serving a 20-year federal prison sentence following her 2021 conviction for child sex trafficking.
No new charges have been filed in connection with the allegations referenced in the newly released documents, and the DOJ has not indicated that any of the claims involving Trump are under active investigation.