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Revelations Complicate Trump’s Sweeping Denials About Epstein
President
Trump often succeeds in pivoting the national conversation, but he is finding
that more difficult when it comes to Jeffrey Epstein.
Luke
Broadwater
By Luke
Broadwater
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/09/us/politics/trumps-epstein-response.html
Sept. 9,
2025
Throughout
his presidency, Donald Trump has proved himself adept at evading the
controversies that have dogged him on a near-daily basis. With the vast powers
of the presidency at his disposal, he often succeeds in pivoting the national
conversation to focus on political terrain he finds more favorable, like
immigration or crime.
But for
weeks now, there has been one controversy the president has been unable to
evade: the public clamor over his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, the deceased sex
offender.
Now, with
the release this week of new information from Mr. Epstein’s estate, including a
suggestive note apparently signed by Mr. Trump, the drip-drip-drip of
revelations is complicating the White House strategy of brushing off the entire
controversy.
The
president’s press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, on Tuesday was once again
confronted with questions about the so-called Epstein files, a collection of
documents from the law enforcement investigation into Mr. Epstein’s abuse of
girls and women.
The White
House has denied for weeks that Mr. Trump sent a bawdy birthday note to Mr.
Epstein in 2003, the subject of an earlier Wall Street Journal report. But on
Monday, the House Oversight Committee obtained the document and released it.
Suddenly,
there it was out in the open for all to see. The drawing of a naked woman. The
strange reference to a “secret” shared between Mr. Trump and Mr. Epstein.
In
response, Ms. Leavitt at first deflected. She accused Democrats of
opportunistically clamoring to release the Epstein documents while Mr. Trump
was president, something they did not make a major push for during the Biden
presidency.
“Why are
the Democrats all of a sudden caring about this? It’s because they are
desperately trying to concoct a hoax to smear the president of the United
States,” Ms. Leavitt said.
Then she
shifted to denial.
Ms.
Leavitt again denied that Mr. Trump had written the note in question. She said
the White House would even support a professional handwriting analyst’s
evaluation of the signature, which she said would vindicate the president.
The
signature on the note closely matches the first-name-only version of the way
the president signed his name in letters to New York City officials at the
time.
Ms.
Leavitt was then asked about another item in the documents released Monday: an
oversized check that purports to be a joking payment of $22,500 from Mr. Trump
to Mr. Epstein, to buy a “fully depreciated” woman.
Ms.
Leavitt again denied Mr. Trump’s involvement, saying he “absolutely” had not
signed the check in question.
But even
as Ms. Leavitt called the situation a “hoax” and claimed Mr. Trump had no role
in the documents released, she said she had never claimed they were fake.
The
documents were subpoenaed from the Epstein estate. Under questioning from
reporters, Ms. Leavitt said she “did not say the documents are a hoax.”
Instead, she suggested that someone must have forged Mr. Trump’s signature.
“The president has one of the most famous signatures in the world, and he has
for many, many years,” she said.
It was
clear she was following the lead of her boss.
Throughout
the month of July, Mr. Trump repeatedly attempted to instruct the media and
fellow Republicans to move on from the Epstein files. In a post on Truth
Social, he urged the G.O.P. to “not waste Time and Energy on Jeffrey Epstein,
somebody that nobody cares about.”
But the
clamor for the files persisted, and the president repeatedly referred to the
controversy as a “hoax,” angering Mr. Epstein’s victims.
After The
Wall Street Journal reported on the Epstein birthday note, Mr. Trump filed suit
accusing the paper and its owner, Rupert Murdoch, of defaming him.
“These
are not my words, not the way I talk. Also, I don’t draw pictures,” Trump wrote
on Truth Social. (Mr. Trump has long drawn pictures and even sold them at
auction.)
He
repeated his denial on Tuesday night, saying that “anybody that’s covered me
for a long time knows that’s not my language. It’s nonsense.”
Democrats
have seized on the controversy. But more concerning for Mr. Trump, he has not
been able to convince all Republicans to back off an effort to release the
files.
Four
Republicans, Representatives Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Marjorie Taylor Greene
of Georgia, Lauren Boebert of Colorado and Nancy Mace of South Carolina, have
joined with Democrats to support what is called a discharge petition to force
the release of the files.
Still,
Republicans have mostly fought the effort, and G.O.P. leaders in Congress have
largely sided with Mr. Trump’s insistence that he played no role in the bawdy
birthday note to Mr. Epstein.
“I’m told
that it’s fake,” Speaker Mike Johnson said of the note.
Representative
James R. Comer, the Kentucky Republican who leads the Oversight Committee, said
that he accepted Mr. Trump’s denial about the note.
“The
president says he did not sign it, so I take the president at his word,” Mr.
Comer said on Tuesday.
He added
that he was not inclined to investigate the signature’s authenticity, even as
Mr. Comer is leading an investigation into the legitimacy of former President
Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s signature on documents that were signed with an autopen.
Michael
Gold contributed reporting.
Luke
Broadwater covers the White House for The Times.


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