New Mexico authorities have finally unleashed a massive search operation at Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous Zorro Ranch, scouring the 7,500-acre property for the bodies of at least two girls allegedly strangled during violent sex sessions.
The raid, involving state Department of Justice agents, police, and the local sheriff’s office, kicked off Monday and spilled into Tuesday—marking a long-overdue crackdown on the elite predator’s isolated playground.
This move comes hot on the heels of the state’s newly formed “truth commission,” aimed at exposing Epstein’s depravities after federal probes fell flat.
Cops swarm on Jeffrey Epstein's Zorro ranch to search for bodies of two girls strangled during rough sex sessions amid human experimentation claimshttps://t.co/xccjjkYr7u
The search targets longstanding rumors of deaths at the ranch near Stanley, New Mexico, where Epstein’s victims may lie buried. “For years talk of the deaths has swirled around Zorro Ranch in the tiny town of Stanley, 30 miles south of the state capital, Santa Fe – but the identities of the girls have never been known,” the Daily Mail reported.
Law enforcement now believes they can locate the remains and identify the victims, running parallel to the truth commission established last month.
State Representative Andrea Romero, who spearheaded the commission, didn’t hold back on the failures that allowed this to fester. “We have heard years of allegations and rumors about Epstein’s activities in New Mexico, but unfortunately, federal investigations have failed to put together an official record,” she said.
She continued, “With this truth commission, we can finally fill in the gaps by investigating the failures that led to the horrific allegations of abuse and crime at Zorro Ranch, so we can learn from them and prevent such atrocities from taking place in our state going forward.”
The operation unfolded just one day after hundreds of protesters rallied at the ranch—now renamed Rancho de San Rafael by its new owner, Texas real estate baron Don Huffines—on International Women’s Day to support sexual abuse victims.
New Mexico Department of Justice spokesman Lauren Rodriguez confirmed the Huffines family granted full access, including surrounding public land. Huffines, who plans to transform the site into a Christian retreat, has distanced himself from its dark past.
Source: modernity