
The United States Department of Justice has released previously undisclosed documents from the Jeffrey Epstein investigation, including an FBI interview summary in which a woman claimed she was introduced to Donald Trump as a minor.
The materials were made public after media outlets reported that certain documents tied to earlier allegations had been withheld from the broader Epstein case file.
According to the Justice Department, the records had previously been incorrectly classified as duplicate files, delaying their release.
What the Newly Released Document Says
The document includes notes from a 2019 interview conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation with a woman whose name is redacted.
In the interview summary, the woman said that when she was between 13 and 15 years old, Epstein allegedly brought her to New York or New Jersey where she was introduced to Trump in a large building.
According to the interview record, she alleged that after others left the room, she was sexually assaulted.
The document is part of investigative material collected during the broader federal investigation into Epstein’s activities.
White House Calls Allegations “Baseless”
Following the release, the White House rejected the claims.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the accusations are “completely unfounded and unsupported by evidence.”
Trump himself has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing connected to Epstein.
He has never been charged with any crime related to the Epstein investigation.
Cooperation With Investigators Later Ended
According to reporting by USA Today and Miami Herald, the woman who made the allegation later stopped cooperating with investigators.
In a follow-up interview, FBI agents reportedly asked whether she was willing to provide more details about her alleged interactions with Trump.
The interview summary states that she questioned whether providing additional information would matter if no action was likely to be taken.
Part of a Larger Epstein Investigation
The documents come from the wider investigation into Epstein, who was arrested in 2019 on federal sex trafficking charges involving minors.
Epstein died in a New York jail later that year, with authorities ruling the death a suicide.
Despite numerous investigations and lawsuits related to his network of associates, the case continues to generate public attention as additional records are released or unsealed.
The Justice Department has not indicated whether the newly disclosed material will lead to any further investigation or legal action.
Source: Vietnam Insider

