The Cover-up Continues
Where is Jane Doe #4's FBI statements? Key documents involving allegations against Trump are missing
Key documents pertaining to Justice Department interviews with a woman who claimed that Donald Trump sexually abused her when she was 13 years old seem to be missing from the DOJ’s Epstein Files library.
I mentioned her allegations in an earlier substack, noting that both her story and another similar one, also involving a 13-year-old girl, are contained in the files, but there’s no paperwork showing what ultimately happened to these allegations once they were reported to the FBI.
Did the Justice Department investigate?
Independent Journalist Roger Sollenberger was the first to figure out that one of these women was interviewed, not once — but at least four times by the FBI and/or federal prosecutors.
That woman, who is originally from New York, told the FBI in 2019, just a week after Epstein’s arrest in New York on sex trafficking charges, that she had been repeatedly and brutally raped by Epstein starting when she was 13 in the 1980s.
A friend of the woman called the tip into the FBI as well, and it is listed on a tip sheet contained in the DOJ’s Epstein Files library.
The tipster told the FBI that her friend was forced to perform oral sex on Trump approximately 35 years ago in New Jersey. The friend said the girl was about 13 or 14 when it happened, and that her friend bit Trump while she was performing oral sex. Trump allegedly responded by slapping the girl in the face. The tipster alleged that she too had been abused by Epstein.
The Justice Department has not addressed the specific allegation, but has said there are a number of “salacious” allegations in the Epstein files that are uncorroborated.
Shortly after the tip became public, along with the interview the alleged victim conducted with the FBI, independent journalist Roger Sollenberger discovered that there were three other FBI interviews with the woman that have not been released by the DOJ.
He discovered this by comparing the bates stamps at the bottom of the first interview with others that were listed in a compendium of files turned to Ghislaine Maxwells’s lawyers during discovery in her federal prosecution.
Maxwell, who went on trial and was convicted on sex trafficking charges in 2021, was entitled to see what evidence the DOJ had in it’s run up to her trial. Sollenberger was able to isolate some of the bates numbers in that discovery catalog — and noticed those numbers were not in DOJ’s Epstein release.
So where are they?
And who is this Jane Doe?
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