From hidden WhatsApp chats coldly bargaining over young Russian girls—”But she asks 1000$ per girl,” with measurements of an 18-year-old and the chilling aside, “Maybe someone will be good for J?” (believed to mean Jeffrey Epstein)—a sharper, more horrifying picture is emerging of the depraved world Virginia Giuffre described. These freshly released screenshots and redacted passports of Eastern European women, unveiled yesterday by House Oversight Democrats from Epstein’s estate, add devastating weight to Giuffre’s posthumous accounts of being forced into an eight-girl orgy on his private island: herself, the financier, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, and seven young Russian girls flown in as mere commodities—who spoke little English and were laughed at for it. As the former royal maintains his denials, this transactional evidence exposes a brutal trafficking pipeline. Who else in Epstein’s elite circle knew—and looked away?

From hidden WhatsApp chats coldly bargaining over young Russian girls—”But she asks 1000$ per girl,” with measurements of an 18-year-old and the chilling aside, “Maybe someone will be good for J?” (believed to mean Jeffrey Epstein)—a sharper, more horrifying picture is emerging of the depraved world Virginia Giuffre described.
These freshly released screenshots and redacted passports of Eastern European women, unveiled on December 18, 2025, by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee from Epstein’s estate, add devastating weight to Giuffre’s posthumous accounts. The materials include a conversation from an unidentified sender: “I have a friend scout she sent me some girls today… I will send u girls now.” Details follow about an 18-year-old Russian, alongside passports from Russia, Ukraine, Lithuania, the Czech Republic, and others—hinting at Epstein’s post-2008 shift to recruiting from Eastern Europe.
Giuffre, who tragically died by suicide in April 2025, detailed in her 2015 deposition and memoir Nobody’s Girl being forced into three sexual encounters with Prince Andrew. The third, she alleged, was an orgy on Little St. James island involving Epstein, Andrew, herself, and approximately eight young Eastern European girls—who spoke little English, appeared underage, and were laughed at for their vulnerability. She described them as terrified and commodified, flown in like merchandise.
Tabloids have portrayed the new texts as directly bolstering Giuffre’s island claims, evoking Epstein’s casual sourcing of Russian women. Yet mainstream sources like ABC News, The Guardian, Politico, and CNN emphasize caution: the messages reference one legal-age woman, lack timestamps or identified participants, and provide no direct evidence of group events, underage involvement, or Prince Andrew’s participation. Andrew has steadfastly denied all allegations, settling Giuffre’s 2022 civil lawsuit without admitting liability.
This estate release—separate from federal files—comes as today’s December 19, 2025, deadline arrives under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed by President Trump on November 19. The law mandates DOJ disclosure of investigative materials, with narrow redactions for victims or probes. Reports indicate intensive redactions, but no major release has materialized yet, raising questions about compliance.
Epstein’s operations exploited poverty and isolation on a global scale, treating lives as transactions. These texts reveal a brutal pipeline, but full context remains elusive. As the DOJ deadline passes amid silence, survivors’ calls for unredacted truth grow louder. Who in Epstein’s elite circle—politicians, billionaires, royals—knew and looked away? Transparency is mandated, but true accountability demands more than selective images.
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