Epstein emails reveal Trump’s directive to Maxwell on Mar-a-Lago recruiting

 November 12, 2025

Hold onto your hats, folks—newly released emails from the late Jeffrey Epstein, a convicted sex offender, drop a bombshell about Donald Trump’s alleged involvement in curbing predatory behavior at Mar-a-Lago.

These emails, unveiled by House Democrats, claim Trump directly told Ghislaine Maxwell to halt recruiting young girls from the Mar-a-Lago spa for abuse, reigniting fierce debate over his past ties to Epstein, the New York Post reported.

Let’s rewind to the 1990s and early 2000s, when Trump and Epstein were known to be chummy in Palm Beach, Florida, before a real estate spat reportedly soured their friendship.

Early Ties and a Falling Out

Fast forward to the mid-2000s, and Trump has long maintained he banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago for inappropriate conduct, including poaching female employees from the club’s renowned spa.

Trump has been vocal about this, explaining to reporters on a past July 29 that Epstein “took people that worked for me,” which he deemed unacceptable, leading to a swift expulsion.

That’s a strong stance, but the progressive crowd seems eager to paint a different picture, conveniently ignoring Trump’s proactive steps while focusing on old associations.

Emails Stir New Controversy

Now, enter the bombshell correspondence: an email from Epstein to author Michael Wolff on January 31, 2019, claims, “[O]f course he knew about the girls as he asked [G]hislaine to stop.”

That line raises eyebrows, suggesting Trump was aware of the issue and intervened—hardly the narrative of complicity that some on the left are desperate to spin.

Another email from April 2, 2011, shows Epstein referencing Trump to Maxwell as “that dog that hasn’t barked,” hinting at an unnamed victim who spent time with Trump but never implicated him.

Political Motives Behind the Release

House Democrats dropped these emails like a hot potato on a recent Wednesday, but the White House, through Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, fired back, calling it a calculated smear job against Trump.

Leavitt argued the unnamed victim is Virginia Giuffre, who has publicly stated Trump wasn’t involved in any wrongdoing—a detail Democrats seem to gloss over in their rush to score political points.

House Oversight Committee Republicans echoed this, questioning why Democrats redacted Giuffre’s name when she’s already cleared Trump, smelling a rat in this selective storytelling.

Trump Responds to the Noise

Trump himself hasn’t minced words, branding this Epstein focus a “hoax” and a desperate Democratic ploy to tarnish his reputation, especially since official probes ruled Epstein’s 2019 jail cell death a suicide with no mysterious “client list” to uncover.

While the left pushes for drama, a bipartisan House petition, awaiting a key signature from Rep.-elect Adelita Grijalva for a potential vote, demands the Justice Department release all Epstein files—a move that still needs Republican Senate approval and Trump’s signature to become law.

At the end of the day, this saga reeks of political theater, but the core fact remains: Trump took action to distance himself from Epstein’s creepy orbit, and no amount of email leaks can rewrite that history.

© 2025 - Patriot News Alerts