In a haunting betrayal of trust at Donald Trump’s lavish Mar-a-Lago, teenage spa girls were secretly funneled into Jeffrey Epstein’s nearby mansion for private massages—despite desperate whispers among staff warning of his repeated indecent exposure and predatory advances. The young workers, some barely out of high school, quietly alerted each other to the dangers, yet this longstanding arrangement persisted for years, with Epstein treated like elite royalty even though he wasn’t a member. The chilling pipeline endured until 2003, when an 18-year-old returned devastated, revealing Epstein’s sexual demands—prompting a discreet cutoff of his access, but no report to authorities. This hidden horror exposes how luxury shielded a predator, igniting outrage: How many warnings were silenced, and how many young lives were endangered before one brave voice finally broke the silence?

In a revelation that exposes a deeply troubling chapter behind the opulent walls of Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, former employees have disclosed that young spa workers—some barely out of high school—were routinely sent alone to Jeffrey Epstein’s nearby Palm Beach mansion for private massages and beauty services. This occurred despite desperate, whispered warnings circulating among the staff about the financier’s repeated indecent exposure and predatory sexual advances during appointments.
The Wall Street Journal’s investigation, published December 30, 2025, details how this longstanding arrangement persisted for years in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Epstein was never a dues-paying member of the exclusive club, yet former staff recall Trump instructing employees to treat him like elite royalty. Epstein maintained an internal spa account, primarily booked by his associate Ghislaine Maxwell. Young female workers—typically licensed cosmetologists or massage therapists, often teenagers or in their early twenties—were dispatched on house calls to his estate just two miles away. The terrified young women quietly alerted each other to the dangers, passing along urgent cautions to avoid the assignments.
This chilling pipeline directly connected Mar-a-Lago to Epstein’s criminal activities. In 2000, Maxwell recruited 16-year-old Virginia Giuffre, then a spa attendant at the resort, offering her work as a massage therapist for Epstein—a position Giuffre later alleged led to years of sexual abuse and trafficking. The Journal identified four additional former Mar-a-Lago employees listed in Epstein’s FBI-seized 2009 address book. Concerns about Epstein dated back to the mid-1990s, when Trump’s then-wife, Marla Maples, reportedly warned staff and her husband that something felt “off” about him.
The arrangement endured until 2003, when an 18-year-old beautician returned devastated from a house call, revealing to managers that Epstein had pressured her for sex. A manager faxed the allegations to Trump, who reportedly called it “a good letter” and ordered Epstein and Maxwell barred from spa services. However, former employees and Palm Beach authorities confirmed the complaint was never reported to law enforcement. Local police only investigated Epstein two years later, following a separate allegation involving a 14-year-old girl.
The White House has strongly denounced the Journal’s reporting as “fallacies and innuendo” aimed at smearing Trump. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt stated that “President Trump did nothing wrong and he kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago for being a creep,” while emphasizing that Trump’s Justice Department continues releasing Epstein-related documents.
Survivors’ advocates have condemned the years of silenced warnings and the failure to notify authorities, arguing that elite institutions like Mar-a-Lago enabled Epstein’s crimes by accommodating a powerful figure. The disclosures come amid ongoing Justice Department releases of Epstein materials under the 2025 transparency law, with criticism focused on redactions and delays.
This hidden horror reveals how luxury and privilege can shield predators, allowing risks to young workers to persist far longer than they should in an environment where influence often trumped protection.
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