"Twice eight", the code they used to "send" minors to Jeffrey Epstein

A new batch of documents about Jeffrey Epstein, accused of trafficking and sexual abuse of minors, has revealed the code that the businessman and some of his partners used to "send" young girls, whom he forced to have sexual relations with all kinds of celebrities, artists and politicians.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
09 January 2024 Tuesday 16:06
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"Twice eight", the code they used to "send" minors to Jeffrey Epstein

A new batch of documents about Jeffrey Epstein, accused of trafficking and sexual abuse of minors, has revealed the code that the businessman and some of his partners used to "send" young girls, whom he forced to have sexual relations with all kinds of celebrities, artists and politicians.

These are several transcripts of interrogations, both of the magnate and of the British heiress Ghislaine Maxwell, currently sentenced to twenty years in prison for helping her sexually abuse minors. Testimonies from whistleblowers and others involved in this network are also collected.

In one of those documents, there is a message to Epstein from modeling agent Jean Luc Brunel, who says he was sent by a "non-blonde" girl whose age is "twice eight." Something that researchers interpret as an internal code. In this case, they would speak of a minor under 16 years of age.

In this new batch, some five hundred pages have also been published of an interrogation of an Epstein victim, Sarah Ransome, who says that from the third massage she gave to the businessman "the rest of the massages were sexual." In addition, she points out that, through her psychiatrist, he prescribed medication for mental illness.

This latest batch of published documents includes a transcript of an interrogation of Virginia Giuffre, one of Epstein's main accusers, in which she quotes several men with whom she was allegedly sexually exploited by Epstein and Maxwell when she was a minor.

Those men, identified above, include Prince Andrew, businessmen Les Wexner and Glen Dubin, politicians George Mitchell and Bill Richardson, modeling agent Jean Luc Brunel and scientist Marvin Minsky.

However, in that statement, Giuffre exempts former President Donald Trump from guilt in Epstein's crimes, whom she says she does not believe "participated in anything," but considers that former President Bill Clinton could have "witnessed" the abuses and declares that he did so. Seen on two occasions, both on the businessman's island.

All of these documents have been disclosed in the last week by order of a New York court. In total, about 4,500 pages, which include transcripts of various interrogations, both of the accused and the complainants.