The Stealing of Emily – Statement on U.S. and UK Developments
Recent events in America underline the urgency of our work. Epstein survivors have spoken out directly, confronting former President Trump in an NBC interview and demanding the release of the full records. In Washington, bipartisan lawmakers are backing the Epstein Files Transparency Act, while survivors themselves are compiling their own “client list” from flight logs and emails in the face of government delay.
Key Developments:
1. Survivors Confront Trump in NBC Interview
Epstein survivors are escalating pressure, directly addressing President Trump with pointed questions during an NBC News interview. One survivor challenged him following his dismissive framing of the Epstein scandal as a “Democratic hoax.”
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2. Press Conference Disrupted by Flyover
During a Capitol Hill press conference where survivors were sharing their stories, a ceremonial US Air Force flyover abruptly interrupted the event. The survivors noted Epstein was known to boast about his closeness to Trump—and one cited a framed photo of the two on his desk. Trump referred to the file release as a “Democratic hoax” shortly thereafter.
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The Cut
3. Survivors Take Transparency Into Their Own Hands
Six survivors, frustrated by the DOJ’s refusal to release a “client list,” revealed they’re now compiling their own using emails, flight logs, and other documents. This effort comes after the House Oversight Committee released around 30,000 pages—most of which were already public, critics say.
The Daily Beast
4. Push for Legislative Action & Direct Appeal to Trump
At a separate event, survivors called for action, urging Congress to vote on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, spearheaded by Rep. Thomas Massie (R‑KY) and supported across party lines. Anouska de Georgiou appealed directly to Trump, urging him to use his influence to help release the records.
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The Daily Beast
5. Bipartisan Momentum Building
The push for accountability is gaining ground: across the aisle, lawmakers like Reps. Ro Khanna (D‑CA), Marjorie Taylor Greene (R‑GA), Lauren Boebert (R‑CO), and Nancy Mace (R‑SC) are signing on to force a vote on transparency legislation.
The Cut
Summary
- Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein are now leading a proactive campaign for transparency amid mounting frustration over redacted and incomplete DOJ disclosures.
- Survivors themselves are gathering evidence independently to hold powerful figures accountable.
- The Epstein Files Transparency Act is gaining bipartisan traction, with increasing calls for Trump to aid in its passage.
- Separately, symbolic interruptions (like the flyover) have intensified scrutiny of the White House’s handling of this matter.
At the same time, our own document requests to the Clinton Presidential Library confirm two meetings between Tony Blair, President Bill Clinton, and Matthew Dunkley at the inception of the 1996 social care changes. These discussions, at the very birth of reform, potentially overlap with the same circles of influence in which Epstein operated.
The consequences have been devastating. In the UK today, over 110,000 children are missing from the care system—enough to populate an entire small city.
As survivors in America demand transparency, we echo their call. The public deserves to know who was present, what was decided, and why generations of children have been left unprotected.
The missing cannot remain invisible.
2. Formal Letter Style (For Clinton Library / Oversight / Congress)
Dear [Recipient],
Recent developments in America have made clear the urgent importance of full disclosure. Epstein survivors are now confronting political leaders directly, calling on Congress to pass the Epstein Files Transparency Act and, in the meantime, compiling their own list of names from available evidence. This comes amid widespread criticism of incomplete and redacted disclosures by government agencies.
In this context, the records we have requested from the Clinton Presidential Library are of central significance. Your own search results confirm two meetings between Tony Blair, President Bill Clinton, and Matthew Dunkley at the inception of the 1996 social care changes. These were not peripheral encounters: they occurred at the very moment when sweeping reforms to children’s social care were being devised. Evidence now available suggests that Epstein’s influence may also have touched these discussions.
The scale of the resulting harm is staggering. In the UK alone, more than 110,000 children are missing from care records—a figure large enough to occupy an entire small city. These are not abstractions or accounting anomalies, but children whose lives were entrusted to the system.
I therefore respectfully request that the Clinton Presidential Library provide the full repository identifiers and dates for the materials already identified in your search. These records are essential for ongoing submissions to oversight bodies in both the United States and the United Kingdom.
The missing cannot remain invisible.
“As Epstein survivors in America confront leaders and demand transparency, our own evidence now confirms Blair, Clinton, and Dunkley met twice in 1996 at the inception of social care reforms. In the UK, 110,000 children remain missing—enough to fill a small city. The missing cannot remain invisible.” — The Stealing of Emily


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