USA TODAY US Edition

New Epstein records highlight debunked claims

- Aysha Bagchi and David Jackson Contributi­ng: Dan Morrison, Kevin McCoy and John Bacon

A new trove of unsealed records tied to Jeffrey Epstein drove a burst of misinforma­tion on social media Monday about debunked sex tape allegation­s involving former Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump, as well as Prince Andrew.

The accuser, Sarah Ransome, describes in the documents footage of a friend having intercours­e with Clinton and the royal. She also says a friend confided in her about having been sexually intimate with former President Donald Trump.

Ransome has separately claimed to also possess a Trump sex tape, according to the New Yorker. However, she told that publicatio­n in 2019 that she invented the sex tape claims “to draw attention to Epstein’s behavior, and to make him believe that she had ‘evidence that would come out if he harmed me.’ ”

Partisans lined up to tee off on the latest documents, spreading the previously debunked claims of videos to wide networks of followers. Donald Trump Jr. tweeted a headline on X, formerly Twitter, stating the documents alleged there were tapes of Clinton and Prince Andrew while adding, “This seems like a big deal and if true why has nothing been done about it?”

It’s the latest in a wave of conspiracy theories fueled by the recent unsealing of the “Epstein list” documents, which are from a lawsuit brought against Epstein’s convicted sex traffickin­g accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.

Neither Clinton nor Trump have commented on the previous releases of Epstein documents; aides refer to statements in previous years in which both men denied knowledge of illicit activities by Epstein. Supporters of both former presidents, meanwhile, have been busy claiming there is more informatio­n about wrongdoing by both, though there is no evidence of that.

Prince Andrew also hasn’t commented on the recent releases, although he has previously denied allegation­s of wrongdoing tied to Epstein, including Virginia Giuffre’s accusation that she was trafficked to him as a minor. He settled a lawsuit from her in 2022 for an undisclose­d sum.

Ransome couldn’t be immediatel­y reached for comment.

In her 2021 book, “Silenced No More,” Ransome describes moving to New York in her 20s and having her dreams destroyed after meeting Jeffrey Epstein and ultimately being trafficked by him. Ransome spoke at a court hearing in 2019 a couple weeks after Epstein died in his jail cell while awaiting trial on sex traffickin­g charges. His death was ruled a suicide.

“Please, please finish what you have started,” she urged prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t. “We all know he did not act alone.”

In 2018, Epstein agreed to settle a lawsuit brought against him by Ransome for a confidenti­al amount. Her lawyer told the Chicago Tribune the settlement was “long overdue” and would give her “economic security.”

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