She was barely out of her teens when Ghislaine Maxwell took her by the arm and led her into a room where Donald Trump waited—part of the same chilling routine Maxwell had perfected for Jeffrey Epstein. In a bombshell interview, Epstein survivor Anouska De Georgiou reveals how Maxwell deliberately presented her to the future president on multiple occasions, carrying the unmistakable intent of trafficking her into the same predatory network. Yet, in a revelation that sharpens the contrast rather than blurs it, De Georgiou states clearly that Trump never once behaved improperly toward her during any of their encounters—while carefully adding that her experience does not speak for others. Her account injects fresh complexity into an already explosive saga, forcing a closer look at intent, opportunity, and the thin line between complicity and restraint. As more voices emerge from the shadows, one question grows louder: what else hasn’t been told?

She was barely out of her teens when Ghislaine Maxwell took her by the arm and led her into a room where Donald Trump waited—part of the same chilling routine Maxwell had perfected for Jeffrey Epstein. In a bombshell interview with BBC Newsnight in late 2025, Epstein survivor Anouska De Georgiou reveals how Maxwell deliberately presented her to the future president on multiple occasions, carrying the unmistakable intent of trafficking her into the same predatory network. Yet, in a revelation that sharpens the contrast rather than blurs it, De Georgiou states clearly that Trump never once behaved improperly toward her during any of their encounters—while carefully adding that her experience does not speak for others. Her account injects fresh complexity into an already explosive saga, forcing a closer look at intent, opportunity, and the thin line between complicity and restraint. As more voices emerge from the shadows amid ongoing Epstein file releases, one question grows louder: what else hasn’t been told?
Anouska De Georgiou, born in 1977, was a British former model who first encountered Epstein as a teenager in London through elite social circles. She has described a sophisticated grooming process that led to repeated assaults over years, involving trips to Epstein’s properties in New York, Paris, and Little St. James island. A close friend of the late Virginia Giuffre, De Georgiou has been a vocal advocate for survivors.
In her recent BBC Newsnight interview, De Georgiou detailed how Maxwell introduced her to Trump “on several occasions” with a “clear message of my being with him in the same way that she had trafficked me and brought me to Jeffrey Epstein.” This echoes historical reports, including a 1997 tabloid account of Maxwell introducing the then-20-year-old De Georgiou to Trump at a New York party, followed by a weekend at Mar-a-Lago and stays in a Trump-owned apartment.
Crucially, De Georgiou emphasized Trump’s conduct: “I can only speak for myself, and this is in no way to negate any other experiences that anyone else might have had with him, but at no time did President Trump behave with any impropriety with me.” Trump, a social acquaintance of Epstein in the 1990s and early 2000s, has denied involvement in Epstein’s crimes.
De Georgiou’s testimony aligns with her advocacy for transparency. In September 2025, she joined survivors at a Capitol Hill rally demanding full Epstein file releases under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. As of December 29, 2025, the Justice Department has unsealed hundreds of thousands of pages—including flight logs and photos—though heavily redacted, with over a million more documents pending into 2026.
Her nuanced account highlights Epstein’s network dynamics: Maxwell’s alleged trafficking intent versus varied outcomes. It underscores power imbalances where introductions carried dark implications, even absent direct harm in some cases.
In a scandal that stripped titles from figures like Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor in October 2025, De Georgiou’s words demand scrutiny of enablement systems. As disclosures continue, her balanced voice ensures survivors’ stories illuminate lingering shadows—reminding us that intent and opportunity alone warrant accountability.
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