New York Post

Epstein vic: Don’t name me

Seeks shield in NY court doc-unseal

- By EMILY CRANE and BEN KOCHMAN

One of Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged victims has asked a judge to keep her identity secret, saying she “lives in fear” for her safety — after it was revealed that the names of more than 170 people with ties to the accused sex trafficker will soon be disclosed, court documents show.

The anonymous woman, only identified as “Doe 107,” made the request in a letter filed by her attorney to Manhattan federal Judge Loretta Preska late Wednesday.

“She lives outside the United States in a culturally conservati­ve country and lives in fear of her name being released,” her attorney wrote, adding that the woman “faces risks of physical harm.”

The request came days after the judge ordered a trove of court documents to be unsealed in the coming weeks that name dozens of individual­s with ties to Epstein, including ex-employees and victims previously only referred to as “Jane Does” or “John Does.”

The long-sealed court papers are linked to a since-settled defamation lawsuit that Epstein accuser Virginia Roberts Giuffre brought against the convicted pedophile’s madam, Ghislaine Maxwell, back in 2015.

While Doe 107 was not mentioned on the soon-to-be-released list, her attorney sought clarificat­ion on whether the court had already decided not to unseal the woman’s identity, the letter shows.

The attorney cited an October filing that showed Giuffre and the Miami Herald — who initially sought the unsealing — had agreed to keep Doe 107’s “name and any personally identifyin­g informatio­n” secret.

The woman’s attorney acknowledg­ed the judge had requested Doe 107 provide “an affidavit supporting her assertion that she faces a risk of physical harm . . . and providing detail concerning the hate mail she received” by Nov. 22.

Doe 107, however, missed that deadline because she recently switched attorneys — and her new lawyer wasn’t aware of the cut-off, the letter says.

‘Naughty list’ taunt

While the ruling doesn’t list anyone specific, it references several Does as being a “public figure,” including one whose name was referenced in Epstein’s infamous little black book.

Most of the names in the papers set to be unsealed have already been made public, with a number previously speaking out about their working relationsh­ips with Epstein or how they were victimized by him, according to the judge’s order. Many have also not objected to the release.

Still, Giuffre — who last year settled a $12 million lawsuit over allegation­s that Epstein sex-trafficked her to the UK’s Prince Andrew — appeared to taunt associates of the well-connected pedophile, suggesting that some of their names could be dredged up.

“There’s going to be a lot of nervous ppl over Christmas and New Years, 170 to be exact, who’s on the naughty list?” Giuffre wrote on X Wednesday night.

“Merry early Christmas,” she said in another tweet.

Giuffre, who has been described as the late financier’s “sex slave,” repeatedly thanked the judge, calling Preska a “truth seeker & justice maker.”

Giuffre’s defamation suit, settled in 2017 for an undisclose­d amount, had centered on her claim that Maxwell defamed her by saying that she was lying about being sex-trafficked by Epstein when she was a teen.

Maxwell was convicted in late 2021 of recruiting and grooming underage girls for Epstein to abuse between 1994 and 2004.

Epstein killed himself in his Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal sex-traffickin­g charges.

 ?? ?? FEARS XPOSURE: An alleged Jeffrey Epstein victim is asking a judge not to ID her when some 170 people with Epstein ties are revealed soon.
FEARS XPOSURE: An alleged Jeffrey Epstein victim is asking a judge not to ID her when some 170 people with Epstein ties are revealed soon.

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