Anouska De Georgiou still remembers the chill that ran through her when Ghislaine Maxwell orchestrated yet another introduction to Donald Trump—each one laced with the same calculated message that had first delivered her into Jeffrey Epstein’s hands: you are here as potential prey. Speaking carefully and deliberately, the Epstein survivor now reveals how Maxwell repeatedly positioned her in front of the powerful businessman with unmistakable predatory intent, treating her as part of the same trafficking pipeline. Yet, in a striking counterpoint that she stresses applies only to her own experience, De Georgiou states unequivocally that Trump never once behaved improperly toward her. Her account peels back the curtain on Maxwell’s cold methodology while adding a layer of complexity that defies simple assumptions. As more survivors share their truths, the deeper puzzle sharpens: how many others were guided into the same rooms with the same unspoken expectations?

Anouska De Georgiou still remembers the chill that ran through her when Ghislaine Maxwell orchestrated yet another introduction to Donald Trump—each one laced with the same calculated message that had first delivered her into Jeffrey Epstein’s hands: you are here as potential prey. Speaking carefully and deliberately in a late 2025 BBC Newsnight interview, the Epstein survivor now reveals how Maxwell repeatedly positioned her in front of the powerful businessman with unmistakable predatory intent, treating her as part of the same trafficking pipeline. Yet, in a striking counterpoint that she stresses applies only to her own experience, De Georgiou states unequivocally that Trump never once behaved improperly toward her. Her account peels back the curtain on Maxwell’s cold methodology while adding a layer of complexity that defies simple assumptions. As more survivors share their truths amid the ongoing release of Epstein files as of December 29, 2025, the deeper puzzle sharpens: how many others were guided into the same rooms with the same unspoken expectations?
Anouska De Georgiou, born in 1977, was a British model drawn into Epstein’s network as a teenager in London through elite social connections. She has described years of grooming and repeated assaults, including trips to Epstein’s properties in New York, Paris, and Little St. James island. A close friend of the late Virginia Giuffre—who died by suicide in April 2025—De Georgiou has long advocated for survivors.
In her BBC Newsnight interview, De Georgiou detailed Maxwell’s actions: “Ghislaine Maxwell did introduce me to him [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.” Historical reports from 1997 corroborate encounters, including 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 a stay in a Trump-owned apartment.
Despite the intent, De Georgiou emphasized: “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 revelation coincides with demands for transparency. In September 2025, she joined survivors at a Capitol Hill rally pushing for full Epstein file releases under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. As of December 29, 2025, the Justice Department has released hundreds of thousands of pages—including flight logs, photos, and associate references—though heavily redacted. Over a million additional documents were uncovered, delaying complete disclosure into 2026 amid criticism.
Her testimony exposes the Epstein network’s dynamics: deliberate introductions with exploitative undertones, yet varying outcomes. It highlights power imbalances where access was created, even absent misconduct in specific cases.
In a scandal that stripped Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor of titles in October 2025, De Georgiou’s nuanced account demands scrutiny of enablement. As partial disclosures continue, her voice ensures survivors’ stories prevail—forcing confrontation with lingering questions about unspoken intents and hidden connections.
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