Shocking Revelation from Epstein’s Emails: He Labeled Trump the Most Vile Person He’d Ever Met
A trove of recently unsealed documents from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate has dropped a bombshell, painting a grim picture of his views on Donald Trump. In one particularly damning email from early 2017, Epstein confided to economist Larry Summers that he’d crossed paths with plenty of shady characters over the years—but none quite like Trump. “I’ve told you before,” Epstein wrote, “I’ve met some very bad people, none as bad as Trump.
Not one decent cell in his body… so yes, dangerous.” This came just weeks after Trump’s inauguration, stirring up fresh questions about their tangled history.

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The House Oversight Committee made these files public earlier this week, dumping over 20,000 pages tied to Epstein’s cases. Among the highlights—or lowlights, depending on how you look at it—were a handful of redacted emails that Epstein swapped with close ally Ghislaine Maxwell and journalist Michael Wolff, Trump’s biographer. These snippets offer glimpses into Epstein’s mindset and hint at deeper connections.
Take the 2011 note to Maxwell, for instance. Epstein seemed almost puzzled: “I want you to realize that that dog that hasn’t barked is Trump. [Redacted name] spent hours at my house with him—he’s never once been mentioned.” Maxwell shot back that she’d been mulling it over, but the exchange leaves a lot unsaid.

Then there’s the back-and-forth with Wolff from late 2015, right around the time Trump was ramping up his presidential run. Wolff tipped Epstein off that CNN might grill Trump about their link during a debate.
Epstein fired back, fishing for advice: “If we were able to craft an answer for him, what do you think it should be?” Wolff’s reply was calculated and cold: Let Trump dig his own grave. If he denies hopping on the plane or visiting the house, it hands Epstein leverage—maybe even a chit to cash in later if Trump pulled off a win. “Of course, it’s possible he’ll just say Jeffrey’s a great guy who’s gotten a raw deal from all this political correctness nonsense, which he’d wipe out in a Trump world,” Wolff added. As it turned out, the debate transcript shows no such question ever landed.

Fast-forward to January 2019, and Epstein’s tone with Wolff turned even more pointed. He referenced a redacted victim’s name alongside “Mar-a-Lago,” then claimed: “Trump said he asked me to resign, never a member ever… Of course he knew about the girls as he asked Ghislaine to stop.”
This all bubbles up against the backdrop of Epstein’s own dark saga. He got pinched in July 2019 on federal charges of sex trafficking minors and conspiracy, entered a not-guilty plea, and then took his own life in a Manhattan jail cell that August. The pressure to unseal these records has been building for years, with Democrats on the committee pushing hard to shine a light on the Epstein web.
From the White House side, the reaction’s been swift and dismissive. Spokespeople insist these emails don’t prove a thing, slamming the release as a Democratic sideshow to dodge real issues. They point out Trump himself booted Epstein from Mar-a-Lago years back after he allegedly creeped out staff with inappropriate moves. Still, as these old messages resurface, they’re bound to keep the whispers going about what Epstein and Trump really knew about each other—and when.

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