Melania
Trump Says She Was Not Associated With Jeffrey Epstein
Responding
to what she said were smears, the first lady said she never had knowledge of
Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse and was not a victim of his. She called for a
congressional hearing for his victims.
Melania
Trump said on Thursday that she was not a victim of Jeffrey Epstein, and that
she had no knowledge of his crimes
Shawn
McCreesh
By Shawn
McCreesh
Reporting
from the White House
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/09/us/politics/melania-trump-jeffrey-epstein.html
April 9,
2026
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Melania
Trump summoned reporters to the White House Thursday afternoon to give a
surprise statement about Jeffrey Epstein, saying she had no relationship with
him, was not a victim of his and had no knowledge of his crimes.
In
remarks that lasted just under six minutes, she said she wanted to clear “my
good name.” She addressed rumors about the origin story of how she met her
husband, the president of the United States. And she called on Congress to give
a hearing to victims of Mr. Epstein’s crimes.
“The lies
linking me with the disgraceful Jeffrey Epstein need to end today,” Mrs. Trump
said. She talked about “numerous fake images and statements about Epstein and
me” that “have been percolating on social media for years now.”
It was
not clear why she chose to speak out now, or to what reports she was referring.
A
spokesperson for Mrs. Trump said the president knew that the first lady planned
to make a statement, but later said it was not clear if Mr. Trump was aware of
the topic of her remarks. In a phone call with an MS Now reporter, Mr. Trump
said he had no prior knowledge of what she had planned to say.
The White
House did not respond to questions about what the president knew on the matter
and when.
The first
lady’s statement is sure to supercharge a narrative that the Trump
administration has been struggling to make go away since last summer, when
chunks of the MAGA base broke into open revolt against Mr. Trump over his
handling of the Epstein investigation.
The
scandal has burbled all year, the president’s supporters refusing to move on
from it no matter how many times he instructs them to. Just last week, Pam
Bondi lost her job as attorney general in part over her failure to contain the
furor. She is still tangled up in it.
What Mrs.
Trump said on Thursday may have been designed to clear her own name, but it
certainly won’t help the West Wing escape its Epstein troubles.
The first
lady started her remarks by recalling the era when she met her husband, and,
apparently, Mr. Epstein.
“Donald and
I were invited to the same parties as Epstein from time to time, since
overlapping in social circles is common in New York City,” Mrs. Trump explained
to the small group of stunned reporters arrayed in the entrance hall of the
White House. The first time she ever “crossed paths with Epstein” was in 2000,
she said, “at an event Donald and I attended together.”
“Epstein
did not introduce me to Donald Trump,” she said. “I met my husband by chance at
a New York City party in 1998. This initial encounter with my husband is
documented in detail in my book.”
The
encounter she was referring to is a story she has told over many years about
meeting Mr. Trump in 1998 at the Kit Kat Club. She has always said that it was
Paolo Zampolli, an Italian modeling agent, who introduced her to Mr. Trump.
Reached
by phone in Milan on Thursday, Mr. Zampolli affirmed Mrs. Trump’s account and
said “I’m ready to testify in Congress” that he introduced the couple that
night at the Kit Kat Club.
Mr.
Zampolli did business with Mr. Epstein and appears several times in the Epstein
files.
Mrs.
Trump’s name appeared in the Epstein files, too — another matter she evidently
wanted to clear up on Thursday. In a 2002 email written to Ghislaine Maxwell, a
woman named “Melania” wrote to Ms. Maxwell to praise a profile of Mr. Epstein
in New York magazine. Ms. Maxwell called the woman “sweet pea,” and the woman
signed her email “Love.”
On
Thursday, the first lady addressed her correspondence with Ms. Maxwell: “To be
clear, I never had a relationship with Epstein or his accomplice Maxwell. My
email reply to Maxwell cannot be categorized as anything more than casual
correspondence.”
The
hydra-headed Epstein scandal has ensnared so many people who’ve walked the
halls of the White House that the first lady seemed intent on setting herself
apart.
“I was
never on Epstein’s plane,” she insisted, “and never visited his private
island.”
The same
cannot be said for her husband, whose name appeared on the flight logs for Mr.
Epstein’s plane several times, or for the commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick,
who acknowledged in a Senate hearing earlier this year that he’d traveled to
Mr. Epstein’s island.
And so
there the first lady stood on Thursday, trying to distance herself from all
things Epstein. She slammed those who would peddle “false smears” against her
and cited people and publishers who’ve issued public apologies to her in the
past. Among them: The Democratic operative James Carville; Harper Collins UK;
The Daily Beast.
“Be
cautious about what you believe,” Mrs. Trump warned.
She
shifted the focus to the victims of Mr. Epstein’s crimes. “I call on Congress
to provide the women who have been victimized by Epstein with the public
hearing specifically centered around the survivors,” she said. “Give these
victims their opportunity to testify under oath in front of Congress.”
The House
Oversight Committee has been investigating Mr. Epstein and the federal
government’s handling of the case against him since last year. The inquiry grew
from the furor over the Trump administration’s backtracking on a decision to
release its full investigative material.
Representative
Robert Garcia of California, the top Democrat on the Oversight Committee, said
in an interview that he agreed with Mrs. Trump’s call for a public hearing,
adding that Democrats had been pushing Republicans to hold one for months. He
also said that Mrs. Trump’s comments seemed to reject Mr. Trump’s frequent
contention that the Epstein investigation was a “hoax” pushed by Democrats.
In recent
months, Mr. Trump has tried to dismiss the Epstein controversy. He told the
country it’s time to “move on” and snapped at a reporter who asked him what his
message would be to Mr. Epstein’s victims.
On
Thursday, his wife struck a different tone: “Every woman should have her day to
tell her story in public, if she wishes.”
And then
she turned on her stiletto heels and stalked out as the dazed reporters started
shouting after her: “Why now!? Why now!?”
Michael
Gold contributed reporting.
Shawn
McCreesh is a White House reporter for The Times covering the Trump
administration.


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