Posobiec, another member of the February influencer group, also highlighted Wolff’s fame in the release. “Michael Wolff apparently helped Epstein lie about Trump,” Posobiec wrote on X. “Never asked him the truth.”
Many right-wing figures on social media have dismissed the full release of the document as a hoax because of a single email from Epstein to Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking. “I want you to realize that the dog that hasn’t barked is Trump. [VICTIM] spent hours with him at my home,” Epstein wrote, before adding that Trump “has never been mentioned,” even by a “police chief.”
Maxwell replied, “I’ve been thinking about that.”
The victim’s name was redacted in the email initially released Wednesday morning by Democrats on the committee, but was not redacted in the broader release by Republicans later Wednesday. That document shows the name “Virginia,” which the White House says refers to Virginia Guiffre, who Epstein accused of abusing her for years before killing herself earlier this year.
MAGA figures claimed that because Guiffre himself said she was unaware of any wrongdoing on Trump’s part, this redaction was evidence that the Democrats were trying to fabricate smears against the president.
“Today’s Epstein emails showed that regime media members colluded with Jeffrey Epstein to create hoaxes about Trump,” says a right-wing commentator Mike Cernovich wrote on X, with Person and added, “This release blew up in the faces of Dems.”
Congresswoman Melanie Stansbury, Member of the House Oversight Committee, told CNN that the document came to them from Epstein’s already redacted estate.
Megyn Kelly, a former Fox News host, did speak about the Epstein case on her show on Wednesday. But instead of addressing Trump’s allegations, she tried to argue that Epstein, according to someone she said was close to the case, was not a pedophile.
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