Thursday, February 19, 2026

United Nations declares the Epstein files might include allegations that amount to 'crimes against humanity,' raising questions about holding U.S. elites accountable

International Criminal Court at The Hague (CNN)


Experts associated with the United Nations say allegations contained in the Epstein files could point to crimes against humanity. How might such a finding play out, and what tribunal likely would be at the heart of an investigation and prosecution? 

Our research indicates the International Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague, Netherlands, probably would play a central role, but the ICC might face serious hurdles in seeking to prosecute citizens of the United States. How could that be? To address that question, we first look at the four types of criminal cases that can come before the ICC

(1)  Genocide -- The specific intent to destroy in whole or in part a national, ethnic, racial or religious group by killing its members or by other means;

(2) Crimes Against Humanity -- serious violations committed as part of a large-scale attack against any civilian population. The 15 forms of crimes against humanity listed in the Rome Statute include offences such as murder, rape, imprisonment, enforced disappearances, enslavement – particularly of women and children, sexual slavery, torture, apartheid and deportation;

(3) War Crimes -- Grave breaches of the Geneva conventions in the context of armed conflict and include, for instance, the use of child soldiers; the killing or torture of persons such as civilians or prisoners of war; intentionally directing attacks against hospitals, historic monuments, or buildings dedicated to religion, education, art, science or charitable purposes;

(4) The Crime of Aggression -- The use of armed force by a State against the sovereignty, integrity or independence of another State. This is the central issue in Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, and the ICC has issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Crimes associated with the Epstein files would fall under No. 2, Crimes Against Humanity. There is little doubt the ICC has the jurisdiction to prosecute such cases. But there is considerable doubt about the ICC's ability to prosecute U.S. citizens. That's because the United States is not a member of the ICC, primarily due to concerns about national sovereignty and the potential for politically motivated prosecutions of its military and political leaders. Also, the U.S. adopted the American Service-Members' Protection Act (ASPA) in 2002, and it gives the president power to use "all means necessary and appropriate to bring about the release of any U.S. or allied personnel being detained or imprisoned by, on behalf of, or at the request of the International Criminal Court".

Does this mean Donald Trump could escape ICC accountability if the court found probable cause to believe he committed crimes against humanity as part of his ties to the Jeffrey Epstein matter? Given that the Epstein files tie Trump to allegations of murder and rape, it's a reasonable question. We don't have a clear-cut answer at the moment, but I'm going to continue to research it. My guess is that Trump and his governmental allies would stand a better than 50-50 chance of skating. As for business leaders and other private citizens, they might be on shakier ground, but the ASPA certainly throws a wrench into the wheels of justice regarding U.S. citizens.

How did the subject of the UN and the Epstein files arise? For that, we turn to a report from The Hill, under the headline "Epstein files allegations may amount to 'crimes against humanity': UN experts." Sophie Brams writes:

A panel of United Nations experts suggested that allegations detailed in the millions of documents released by the Justice Department (DOJ) connected to its probe of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein could amount to some of the most serious crimes under international law.

The group of experts, appointed by the U.N. Human Rights Council, said in a statement released Monday that the files signal “the existence of a global criminal enterprise” that engaged in the “systematic and large-scale sexual abuse, trafficking and exploitation” of women and girls.

“These crimes were committed against a backdrop of supremacist beliefs, racism, corruption, extreme misogyny and the commodification and [dehumanization] of women and girls from different parts of the world," they said.

What are the legal requirements for a finding of crimes against humanity, and how might the content of the Epstein files meet them? The Hill report addresses both questions:

The U.N. panel warned that some accusations contained in the documents released by the DOJ may meet that threshold.

“All the allegations contained in the ‘Epstein Files’ are egregious in nature and require independent, thorough, and impartial investigation, as well as inquiries to determine how such crimes could have taken place for so long,” they said.

“So grave is the scale, nature, systematic character, and transnational reach of these atrocities against women and girls, that a number of them may reasonably meet the legal threshold of crimes against humanity,” the panel added:

To understand how Epstein-related crimes might be prosecuted, and under what standard, it helps to examine some basic definitions: 

Crimes against humanity are defined under international law as when certain acts are committed “as part of widespread or systematic attack directed against any civilian population.” These acts — which include rape, sexual slavery, and murder, among other offenses — differ from war crimes in that they do not require armed conflict and can occur in peaceful times, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The U.N. panel warned that some accusations contained in the documents released by the DOJ may meet that threshold.

The panel also addressed concerns that the Trump administration handled the files in a slipshod fashion, raising questions about transparency and unlawful redactions. Here is more from The Hill:

The Trump administration has been criticized for its handling of the investigation into Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell, with critics arguing it has not been transparent in the batches of documents released.

Lawmakers who reviewed the unredacted Epstein files at a DOJ office over the past week reported heavy, “unnecessary” redactions in what they saw. Trump officials have maintained the redactions are meant to ensure victims’ identities are kept private.

The U.N. panel echoed concerns about “botched redactions” that exposed victims’ information in previous disclosures — a blunder the Trump administration blamed on “technical or human error” when it announced it had taken down the documents and images.

“The grave errors in the release process underscore the urgent need for victim-centered standard operating procedures for disclosure and redaction, so that no victim suffers further harm,” they wrote.

If the UN panel reaches a finding of crimes against humanity, how might that play out? For insight on that question, we turn to a report at UN.com focusing on the global human-rights issues the Epstein files present:

In a statement on Monday, the independent experts – who serve in their individual capacities under mandates from the UN Human Rights Council and are not UN staff – warned that the alleged acts documented in the files could amount to some of the gravest crimes under international law.

The reported conduct could amount to sexual slavery, reproductive violence, enforced disappearance, torture, inhuman and degrading treatment, and femicide, according to the experts.

Under international criminal law, crimes against humanity occur when acts such as rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution, trafficking, persecution, torture or murder are committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack directed against a civilian population, with knowledge of the attack.

The experts said the patterns reported in the files may meet this threshold and must be prosecuted in all competent national and international courts.

This suggests an array of tribunals, prosecutors and judges will handle the cases, based on jurisdictional principles outlined under international law. The UN report notes that Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell has been convicted of sex trafficking and other offenses and sentenced to a 20-year prison sentence. But the report also states, "Questions persist regarding the potential involvement of additional individuals, financial structures and possible transnational dimensions of the alleged criminal enterprise."

In other words, the UN intends to pursue issues that largely have been covered up by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) under Donald Trump. 

Trump and his allies have essentially been begging the American public to "move on" from the Epstein files. But the UN appears to have no intention of following suit. From the report:

The experts hailed the courage and resilience of victims in seeking accountability at significant personal cost, stressing that under international human rights law, States are obligated to prevent, investigate and punish violence against women and girls, including acts committed by private actors. . . . 

“The failure to safeguard [victims'] privacy puts them at risk of retaliation and stigma,” the experts warned.

They further underscored that “resignations of implicated individuals alone are not an adequate substitute for criminal accountability,” welcoming steps by some governments to probe current and former officials and private individuals named in the files. They called on other States to do the same.

“Any suggestion that it is time to move on from the ‘Epstein files’ is unacceptable. It represents a failure of responsibility towards victims,” they said.

“It is imperative that governments act decisively to hold perpetrators accountable,” the experts said. “No one is too wealthy or too powerful to be above the law.”

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Is Trump showing signs of mental shakiness after claiming he had "nothing to do" with Jeffrey Epstein and had been "totally exonerated" in the whole matter?


Trump addresses reporters on Air Force One (Reuters)

If you are among the many Americans who have been wondering about Donald Trump's mental health, you now have additional reasons to suspect the president has more than a few misfiring synapses inside his 79-year-old brain. As Trump flew back to Washington on Monday night after spending a holiday weekend at Mar-a-Lago, he stood before assembled reporters on Air Force One and proclaimed that he had "nothing to do" with the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and that he had been "totally exonerated" in the matter.

Assuming journalists consume the news while also creating it, those gathered before Trump likely knew he was lying on the first point. As for Trump's second point, about "exoneration" . . . well, those who gather the news often have experience covering court proceedings. That means Trump's words must have left them thinking, "The president of the United States has no idea what 'exoneration' means." 

Here is a primer on a word that often is used as a legal term, one with a specific meaning. This is from the website for the Capitol City Group of the Twin Cities in Minnesota:

The legal definition of exoneration is the official clearing of a person’s name from guilt or blame. It typically applies when a person has been convicted of a crime and later proven to be innocent. When a court sets aside a conviction, vacates a judgment, or dismisses all charges based on new evidence, that person is said to have been exonerated.

The Epstein files represent an ever-growing mountain of evidence that eventually could be used to charge Trump with some of the most heinous crimes imaginable -- the rape and murder of children, perhaps the financing or furtherance of Epstein's human-trafficking scheme. But at this point, Trump does not appear close to being charged. And with his own Department of Justice (DOJ) seemingly engaged in a cover-up -- as Hillary Clinton eloquently alleged on Tuesday -- the odds look slim that anyone in authority ever will have the stones to hold Trump accountable. 

Speaking of Mrs. Clinton, her words seemed to get under Trump's tissue-thin skin when relayed to him by reporters. A jointly published article by Mediaite and Yahoo! sets the scene under the headline "Trump Tells Reporters He Had 'Nothing To Do With Jeffrey Epstein' Amid New Accusations in Epstein Files; 'Totally Exonerated!' Tommy Christopher writes:

President Donald Trump claimed he “had nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein” and is “totally exonerated” despite 38,000 mentions and new accusations in the Epstein Files.

Media and public attention has intensified since the latest release of Epstein files documents at the end of January. Among the 3 million pages were more than 5,300 documents mentioning Trump, including multiple claims of sexual misconduct against Trump in FBI documents.

One document contained an allegation that Trump and Jeffrey Epstein raped a girl together, from a witness who said he heard Trump brag about the crime. 

How did Trump go off the rails on the word "exoneration"? It happened mainly because a reporter pushed him on the issue, as Christopher sets out:

One reporter asked Trump about comments that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made in an interview with the BBC in which she said she and former President Bill Clinton were “pulled in” to divert attention from Trump.

The president responded by claiming the files “totally exonerated” him:

REPORTER: So Hillary Clinton said in an interview today that she and her husband are getting pulled into the Epstein matter to divert attention from you! And that your administration has something to hide. What’s your response?

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: I have nothing to hide! I’ve been exonerated! I have nothing to do with Jeffrey Epstein.

They went in hoping that they’d find it and found just the opposite. I’ve been totally exonerated.

And in fact, Jeffrey Epstein was fighting that I don’t get elected with some author, a sleazebag, by the way. 

And I’ve been totally exonerated.

No, no, they’re getting pulled in. And that’s their problem. I don’t know. They’re gonna have to see what happens. But I watched her in Munich, and she seriously has Trump derangement syndrome.

REPORTER: You think that she should publicly testify? 

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: You know, I’ve been totally exonerated on Epstein. And it’s really interesting because they’ve been pulled in.

Think of it. They’ve been pulled in. Clinton and many other Democrats have been pulled in. 

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Victim in Epstein files provided credible accusations that Donald Trump had sexually assaulted her, while Maria Farmer twice warned the FBI about Trump


Maria Farmer: She warned FBI about Trump (Yahoo!)


Newly discovered details in the Epstein files show that a victim in the sex-trafficking scandal told the FBI Donald Trump had sexually assaulted her -- undercutting claims by the White House, most recently stated by Attorney General Pam Bondi, that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) had no such evidence as of last week. That's from a report by Roger Sollenberger, a highly regarded independent journalist who has worked at The Daily Beast and Salon and had his free-lance articles published at BuzzFeed News, WIRED, the New Republic, and VICE, among others. 

His latest piece is published at Substack, under the headline "FBI interviewed Trump accuser, Epstein files show; Trump was credibly accused of sexual assault. It's unclear what became of the DOJ's investigation." Sollenberger writes:

The FBI spoke to a victim of Jeffrey Epstein who also accused Donald Trump of sexually and violently assaulting her, according to records in the Justice Department’s publicly searchable Epstein database.

The records don’t show what became of the DOJ’s investigation into the allegations, but the documents indicate the government found her to be a credible accuser. Records elsewhere in the files reveal that a woman with matching biographical details sued Epstein’s estate and won a settlement in 2021.

The allegations and FBI interview are landmark revelations, undermining the White House’s protestations that Trump hasn’t been accused of wrongdoing and showing instead that the U.S. government has been aware of a credible Trump accuser in the Epstein files.

Not all of the documents the DOJ released on Jan. 30 have been widely seen as credible. As a report at Occupy Democrats stated:

Within the huge tranche of millions of Epstein files are dozens upon dozens of accusations against Donald Trump, but many of them are from FBI tip lines and aren’t considered to be very credible.

However, buried within the pages is a report from the FBI that shows the government found [a woman] to be a credible accuser — and her story from the late 1980s is deeply disturbing. 

Roger Sollenberger provides details showing why the latest records to surface are both disturbing and credible. He writes:

The DOJ included the woman’s allegation in a comprehensive 21-page internal slideshow presentation about the government’s investigations into Epstein and convicted co-conspirator Ghislaine Maxwell, well as in an internal email chain collecting information for the presentation. Her accusation is one of two about Trump that the FBI’s child sex trafficking and violent crimes task forces noted on the slide, which listed a number of then-nonpublic accusations involving prominent figures.

“[REDACTED] stated Epstein introduced her to Trump who subsequently forced her head down to his exposed penis which she subsequently bit,” the presentation says. “In response, Trump punched her in the head and kicked her out.” The victim would have been “approximately 13-15 years old when this occurred,” according to the presentation. The alleged assault took place in the early-mid 1980s, and the same woman also claimed to be an Epstein victim.

One claim is particularly powerful -- and credible -- because it comes from a government witness whose testimony under oath helped convict Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell. Sollenberger writes:

The second Trump claim on the slide — that Epstein introduced a victim to Trump when she was 14 years old, saying, “This is a good one, right?” to which Trump agreed — carries immense credibility within the DOJ: That claim, about an incident at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago club in 1994, came from a key government witness whose testimony at trial helped DOJ prosecutors convict Maxwell, the files reveal.

Both the presentation and the email chain were created last summer, around the time Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche interviewed Maxwell for an anachronistic jailhouse proffer.

At first viewing, the assault allegation against Trump appeared to have limited value. But a closer look indicated several reasons the Trump claim stood out. Sollenberger dives into those reasons:

The assault allegation initially came via a lead called into an FBI hotline, according to internal records about the hotline tips. The Trump accusation sits at the top of that list, which also contains salacious, unverified, and often bizarre accusations against Trump. The notes show the FBI followed up on the tip, learning the victim’s identity from the caller and preparing to dispatch agents to the “Washington Office” for an interview.

But the slideshow presentation and the internal emails last summer don’t cite the hotline as the source for the tip, as they do for a tip about Bill Barr. Instead, both cite the victim herself as the source of the claim, showing the FBI spoke directly with the Trump accuser. (Elsewhere on the slide, a claim about former President Bill Clinton is attributed to someone specified as “not a victim.”)

While it’s not clear what became of the investigation into the Trump claim, details from the tip match other records in the files, including an FBI write-up (known as a “302” form) of an interview with an Epstein victim and her lawyer. The interview was conducted July 24, 2019, and entered into the FBI’s case files on August 9, the day before Epstein was found dead in his jail cell.

A statement from the lawyer indicated his client had been the target of Trump's violence once, causing her to fear being targeted again. From the Sollenberger report:

Later in the interview, the woman discussed a photo of Epstein and Trump that someone had sent her, which was still saved in her phone. The victim asked the agents if she could crop someone out of the picture — Donald Trump. When the FBI agents asked if she could explain why she wanted to crop Trump out, the woman hesitated, and her attorney answered, saying “[REDACTED] was concerned about implicating additional individuals, and specifically any that were well known, due to fear of retaliation,” the 302 says.

”Of note, the particular image sent to her was recognized by Agents as a widely distributed photograph of JEFFREY EPSTEIN and current United States President DONALD TRUMP,” the 302 says.

Epstein database searches for this victim’s case number — 3501.045 — turn up other affiliated documents, including a July 19, 2019, memo showing the FBI’s Seattle, Washington, field office handled the interview.

The victim's allegations against Epstein and Trump have only been known to the public for two days. But the encounters go back roughly 45 years, and the abuse she experienced goes beyond the two most famous names associated with the case. Sollenberger provides an explanatory timeline:

The woman’s Epstein “victimization occurred in the 1980’s when the caller was approximately 13 to 15 years old and resided in the [REDACTED] Island area of South Carolina. The reported victim provided enough preliminary information to warrant a follow-up interview,” the memo says.

Those biographical details match the initial tip, which notes a criminal history in South Carolina. They also match public reporting about a South Carolina victim relocated to Vancouver, WA — close to Seattle — who filed a lawsuit against Epstein, receiving a settlement from his estate in 2021.

According to reports about the lawsuit, the victim claimed she had also been assaulted and raped by “other prominent, wealthy men” she met in other states, most specifically when Epstein took her to “intimate gatherings” in New York City. The alleged sexual and violent assault at Trump’s hands took place in New Jersey, according to FBI notes.

The woman’s reported settlement with the Epstein estate came despite a seeming paucity of hard evidence to support her claims. The 302 notes that the victim said she “never would have written down what happened to her,” only told two people about the abuse — one of whom, her mother, had passed away — and “did not keep a formal diary, and she did not make any recordings of any kind regarding the incidents.

There’s also a seeming paucity of information about this victim in the Epstein files. Searches for the victim’s case number pull up some records — including the cropped photo of Epstein mentioned in the 302 — but some gaps appear in the FBI’s ordinal record-keeping of the files.

A master Epstein evidence manifest shows the government “acquired” at least four pieces of evidence in late February and March of last year—around the time the DOJ was conducting its initial all-hands review of Epstein records, and around the time the DOJ was returning to Trump troves of sensitive government documents he took with him to Mar-a-Lago upon leaving office in 2021.

I’ve reached out to a DOJ spokesperson for comment, and will update this piece with any response.

What are the chances that these latest revelations will, finally, cause accountability to land at Trump's doorstep. A reasonable American -- having seen a string of government entities, from the U.S. Supreme Court, to the DOJ, on down, provide Trump with favorable treatment -- might conclude there is a "fat chance" of the president ever being held accountable. But Sollenberger does not seem so sure about that:

So far, Trump — thanks in part to false statements, misdirection, public confusion, and excessive redactions from his own DOJ — has evaded the crosshairs of credible allegations in the Epstein files.

However, this claim would contradict the narrative that the sitting president has not been credibly accused of wrongdoing in the Epstein saga. . . .

A separate internal DOJ email about allegations involving Maxwell victims and prominent figures dated around the same time — July 22, 2025, days before Blanche’s jailhouse interview — includes this allegation, noting the victim “testified at trial.” The encounter occurred at Trump’s resort compound at Mar-a-Lago when the victim was 14 or 15 years old, the email states. That matches a claim in handwritten notes from 2019, where the victim recounts over several pages her traumatic history with Epstein and Maxwell. The encounter with Trump occurred around 1994-1995, the notes say.

“This is my friend [REDACTED],” the notes say about what Epstein said at the time. “Think he said friend.”

With the help of allies in Congress and the media, Trump has bulled through dozens of allegations of sexual misconduct, emerging with little political damage. But the courts have delivered significant verdicts against him: In 2023 and 2024, juries in New York found Trump liable for sexually abusing and defaming writer E. Jean Carroll, awarding her a total of $88.3 million, then convicted him on 34 felony counts for fraudulently disguising payments to buy the silence of adult film star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election, weeks after leaked Access Hollywood footage revealed Trump bragging in 2005 about grabbing  women “by the pussy” without fear of consequences.

Annie Farmer, the only one of four main accusers against Ghislaine Maxwell to testify under her real name, has not said she directly was a victim of assault by Trump. . . . But she does meaningfully undermine one of the president’s central defenses — that despite years of close friendship and socializing, Trump had not been aware that Epstein preyed on underage girls and cut ties with him once he did learn about it.

Maria Farmer, an Epstein and Maxwell victim and the sister of Annie Farmer, another key witness against Maxwell, says she told the FBI twice to look into the now-dead predator’s ties to the president, in 2006 and 1996.

The claim adds to a growing pile of information challenging what Trump knew about his dead friend’s history of abusing and raping young women, and when he knew it. That evidence includes a lewd birthday card Trump sent Epstein in 2003, the long and deeply reported history of their socializing in the 1980s and '90s, a fully redacted email between Epstein and Maxwell discussing Epstein and Trump’s relationship, and an FBI interview with Palm Beach chief of police Michael Reiter, who said Trump told him in a 2006 phone call that Epstein’s disgusting behavior was widely known and Maxwell was “evil.”

Asked about that call last week, the White House wouldn’t confirm or deny that it occurred.

“Thank goodness you’re stopping him, everyone has known he’s been doing this,” Reiter recalled Trump saying. The chief also recalled Trump claiming he’d once encountered Epstein around a group of teenagers and “got the hell out of there.”