
Newly released images from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate show women with eerie messages inked on their skin – quotes taken from a controversial novel centered on the sexualization of a young girl – exposing another layer of control and exploitation within Epstein’s network.
As the Department of Justice approaches its deadline to publicly release the full Epstein files, a newly unsealed cache of photographs has revealed disturbing new details about the late financier’s alleged sex trafficking operation.
The release comes just one day before the official deadline set by the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a bill passed nearly unanimously by Congress and signed into law by President Donald Trump in November. The act compels the Attorney General to disclose all unclassified materials connected to the Epstein investigation in a searchable, downloadable format by Dec. 19.
Epstein and Maxwell
Epstein, arrested in July 2019 on federal charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy, was accused of exploiting dozens of underage girls through a vast network of accomplices, money, and high-profile connections.
He died by suicide a month later while in federal custody at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York. Despite his death, legal proceedings against his estate and associates have continued.
His long-time associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, now 63, was convicted in 2021 on multiple counts related to sex trafficking and is currently serving a 20-year sentence in federal prison.
Prosecutors described her as central to Epstein’s criminal enterprise, often responsible for recruiting and grooming victims.
Shocking materials
The BBC reports that among the 68 documents released Dec. 18 by the House Oversight Committee are photos of redacted passports belonging to women from countries such as Russia, Morocco, South Africa, and Ukraine, alongside Epstein socializing with prominent figures including Bill Gates, Steve Bannon, Woody Allen, Noam Chomsky, and Google co-founder Sergey Brin.
Two images feature Gates photographed with unidentified women whose faces were obscured for privacy.
Gates has previously acknowledged meetings with Epstein but denies any involvement in his crimes.
The batch also includes a photograph of a map of Great St. James Island, one of Epstein’s two private islands in the U.S. Virgin Islands where he allegedly abused underage girls, and an image of Epstein’s sex offender passport issued just months before his 2019 arrest, which explicitly labeled him “a registered sex offender” who had been “convicted of a sex offence against a minor.”
‘I will send u girls now’
Among the most troubling pieces is a screenshot of a text message exchange. The content appears to describe active trafficking efforts.
One unidentified sender writes: “I don’t know, try to send someone else. I have a friend scout she sent me some girls today. But she asks 1000$ per girl. I will send u girls now. Maybe someone will be good for J?”
The message, according to several reports, is consistent with claims made in court documents and survivor testimonies about how girls were sourced and sent to Epstein’s properties.
Lolita
While some of the images focus on travel documents and elite connections, others reveal deeply unsettling visuals that appear to speak directly to Epstein’s predatory psychology.
Several photographs depict women – whose faces are redacted – with handwritten messages inked directly onto their arms, legs, and feet.
Each message is a verbatim quote from Vladimir Nabokov’s controversial 1955 novel Lolita, a story about a middle-aged man’s sexual obsession with a 12-year-old girl.
One woman’s foot is marked in black ink with the line: “She was Lo, plain Lo, in the morning, standing four feet ten in one sock.”

Another woman’s body bears the message: “She was Lola in slacks.”
A third reads: “She was Polly at school.”
‘Must end this White House cover-up’
These photographs, now part of the publicly available record, add a new visual and symbolic dimension to Epstein’s legacy of abuse. They reveal how Epstein and his associates may have glamorized or even mythologized the exploitation at the center of his crimes.
The House Oversight Committee has confirmed that more records will be released as they review nearly 100,000 documents tied to the investigation.
In a public statement issued after the release, Rep. Robert Garcia, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, said in a press release that the “Oversight Democrats will continue to release photographs and documents from the Epstein estate to provide transparency for the American people.”
“As we approach the deadline for the Epstein Files Transparency Act, these new images raise more questions about what exactly the Department of Justice has in its possession. We must end this White House cover-up, and the DOJ must release the Epstein files now,” Garcia shared.
The public now awaits the full file dump, due today – Dec. 19 – as calls for accountability and transparency continue to mount.
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