The United States government released on Friday (30) more than three million new documents related to the case of pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The new batch of files provides previously unpublished details about communications between people in former Democratic President Bill Clinton’s circle and Epstein, as well as e-mail exchanges involving Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s girlfriend and associate.
The new documents reveal frequent email exchanges between Maxwell and members of Clinton’s team between 2001 and 2004. The messages include communications about travel logistics, dinner invitations and, in some cases, explicit sexual content.
A Clinton spokesperson told CNN that the former president did not write any of the emails included in the material released on Friday. According to him, Clinton rarely used email throughout her life and did not maintain shared accounts with advisors. Even so, in the documents made public on Friday, the senders and recipients appear, in several cases, identified by the acronym “WJC”, which, according to sources told the US press, is a reference to William Jefferson Clinton, therefore, an acronym used to designate addresses associated with the Democrat’s post-presidential office.
In one of the emails addressed to the acronym WJC, Ghislaine Maxwell, an associate of Epstein, wrote that she had told a newspaper that the recipient (the email from Clinton) was a “super stud” and that she had a “crush” on him.
“I couldn’t help it – there was a juicy little detail I missed: about how you’re a super stud, how I have a crush on you and… well, you understand. I hope you don’t mind,” Maxwell wrote.
A previous batch of files, released in December, had already revealed previously unseen photographs of Clinton with Epstein, including images of the former Democratic president shirtless in a hot tub next to a person described by Justice Department officials as a victim of Epstein’s sexual abuse scheme.
The release of the material comes just days before a scheduled vote in the US House of Representatives that could declare Clinton and his wife, Hillary Clinton, in contempt of Congress. According to the House Oversight Committee, the couple ignored subpoenas to provide testimony as part of the legislative investigation into the Epstein case.
