“Let me teach you how little girls are supposed to be.”
According to an interview with a woman conducted by the FBI as part of an investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, those were some of the first words Donald Trump directed at her before he began a sexual assault that ended with Trump reportedly hitting her and pulling her hair.
Overshadowed by Thursday's firing of DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, the Department of Justice quietly released previously missing FBI interviews with an Epstein victim whose explosive allegations have sent shockwaves through Washington.
According to Politico, the unidentified woman alleged she was a teenager when Epstein introduced her to Trump.
In files dated between August and October 2019, the woman—whose name is redacted—claims that when she was between 13 and 15 years old, Epstein took her to either New York or New Jersey. In "a very tall building with huge rooms," he introduced her to Trump. Trump, she said, "didn't like that I was a boy-girl," which interview notes interpreted to mean tomboy.
According to the woman's account, other people were present initially, but she could not recall who they were. Trump asked them to leave the room, then said "something to the effect of, 'Let me teach you how little girls are supposed to be,'" according to the interview notes. Trump then unzipped his pants and placed her head "down to his penis," she recalled. She said she "bit the s--- out of it." He then pulled her hair and punched her on the side of her head, she stated.
"Get this little b---- the hell out of here," the woman recalled him saying. At that point, others reentered the room. The FBI interviews contain no information about how the incident concluded or how the woman left the encounter.
During one interview, the woman disclosed that she had retained attorneys and "wanted to be upfront" about "her pending civil case in the event the agents determined a conflict of interest could occur."
The woman told the FBI that she and people close to her received threatening phone calls, including one left on a co-worker's phone but intended for her. She believed the calls were related to Epstein, and "stated under her breath that if it was not Epstein, maybe it was the 'other one.'" When agents asked who she meant, she identified Trump, according to the interview notes.
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