Just hours ago, secret text messages surfaced haggling over young Russian women—”But she asks 1000$ per girl”—complete with an 18-year-old’s measurements and a chilling note: “Maybe someone will be good for J?”, believed to mean Jeffrey Epstein. These damning screenshots, part of a fresh release by US House Democrats alongside redacted passports from Russia and Ukraine, lend shocking credence to Virginia Giuffre’s sworn testimony of a depraved orgy on Epstein’s private island. Giuffre, who tragically took her own life earlier this year, alleged she was forced into the act with Epstein, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, and seven young Russian girls flown in for the occasion—girls who barely spoke English. As the former prince clings to his denials, these new revelations raise urgent questions: How vast was Epstein’s trafficking ring, and who else turned a blind eye?

Just hours ago, on December 18, 2025, Democrats on the House Oversight Committee unleashed another bombshell batch of nearly 70 photographs and documents from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate — graphic evidence of a predatory network that treated young women like commodities. Among the most damning: a screenshot of late-night text messages haggling over “girls” like livestock. “I have a friend scout she sent me some girls today,” the unknown sender writes. “But she asks 1000$ per girl. I will send u girls now. Maybe someone will be good for J?” — the “J” almost certainly Jeffrey Epstein himself.
The messages include details of an 18-year-old Russian woman — her height, weight, measurements, and origin — alongside heavily redacted passports of Eastern European women from Russia, Ukraine, Lithuania, the Czech Republic, and beyond. These images corroborate years of allegations that, after his 2008 Florida conviction, Epstein pivoted his recruitment pipeline to Eastern Europe, sourcing barely-legal or underage girls who spoke little English, making them easier to control and silence.
For survivors, this is no abstract revelation. It strikes at the heart of Virginia Giuffre’s haunting testimony. Giuffre, who tragically took her own life in April 2025 at age 41, swore under oath that she was forced into a depraved orgy on Little St. James island involving Epstein, Britain’s Prince Andrew (then Duke of York), herself, and seven young Russian girls flown in specifically for the event. The girls, she said, were terrified, monolingual, and utterly trapped — echoes of the vulnerable passports now emerging.
Giuffre detailed the nightmare in her 2015 deposition and posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: how Epstein’s recruiters scoured modeling agencies and impoverished regions for fresh faces, paying scouts a pittance per “delivery.” The new texts — with their casual “$1000 per girl” barter and eager “Maybe someone will be good for J?” — read like a direct script from her horrors. Prince Andrew has vehemently denied any wrongdoing, settling Giuffre’s civil suit in 2022 for millions without admission of guilt. Yet these documents paint an ever-darkening picture of complicity in Epstein’s inner circle.
The release, timed one day before the Department of Justice’s December 19 deadline to disclose thousands more files under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, intensifies pressure on the Trump administration. How vast was this trafficking web? Who financed the private jets shuttling these girls across oceans? And crucially, who else — politicians, billionaires, royals — turned a blind eye or worse?
Epstein may be dead, but his machine’s fingerprints linger. These texts aren’t just evidence; they’re a scream from the grave of victims like Giuffre, demanding the full truth. As more files loom tomorrow, one thing is clear: the reckoning is far from over.
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