
New Mexico official seeks search near Epstein ranch over claim of buried girls
Newsy
A top New Mexico official is calling for an investigation into public land near Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch after a newly released email alleged that two foreign girls were buried there.
A top New Mexico official is calling for an investigation into public land near Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch after a newly released email alleged that two foreign girls were buried there.
Land Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard said she requested an investigation after learning about a 2019 email included in recently released Epstein-related documents. The email, sent to a conservative radio host, claimed that two girls were buried on public land leased near the ranch. The act was allegedly done at the direction of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, who is serving a 20-year federal prison sentence for sex trafficking.
“There was a very disturbing allegation that came out that could potentially be linked to state land,” Garcia Richard said. “Because I am the manager of that land. I’m the elected steward of that land and what occurs there and what the land is used for is of utmost interest and importance to us at the State Land Office.”
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She said, to her knowledge, neither the state land nor Zorro Ranch has ever been searched as part of a criminal investigation.













