
DOJ Releases FBI Interviews With Woman Who Accused Trump Of Sexual Assault
HuffPost
The files had previously been missing from the database Congress forced the Justice Department to create this year.
The Justice Department added files to its public Epstein Library on Thursday recounting an unsubstantiated allegation against President Donald Trump.
The files memorialize interviews with a woman who spoke to FBI agents several times in 2019, after the federal government had charged Jeffrey Epstein with sex-trafficking crimes. The woman described an encounter with Trump in the early 1980s, when she was a minor, in which she said he sexually assaulted her.
The files had previously been missing from the database Congress forced the Justice Department to create this year. The department said last week it was considering whether to add them.
In one of the new FBI documents, the woman describes her supposed encounter with Trump. In another, she described mysterious, seemingly threatening phone calls she received for years after suffering abuse at the hands of Epstein and his associates, plus several instances she described as “close calls,” including one in which she was driving and another car tried to run her off the road.
Trump said in 2002 he’d known Epstein for 15 years, suggesting they’d met in the late 1980s, not the early 1980s when the alleged abuse took place. Police started investigating Epstein’s sex crimes in the mid-2000s.













