For more than two decades, the public conversation surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes has centered almost exclusively on what he and his accomplices did to girls and young women. Yet a startling new disclosure from the unredacted federal files suggests the predator’s appetite for destruction extended further than the public ever knew. According to a sitting member of Congress who has reviewed the documents, a lawsuit alleges that young men were drugged and raped at Epstein’s secluded New Mexico compound, Zorro Ranch.
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U.S. Rep. Melanie Stansbury, a New Mexico Democrat serving on the House Oversight Committee, told a Santa Fe podcast last month that one of the lawsuits buried in the file trove came from a man who said he was lured to the 7,500-acre ranch under the pretense of attending a party, only to be drugged and sexually assaulted. He further alleged that other young men at the same gathering suffered the same fate. The story, picked up this week by theNew York Post, adds a previously underreported dimension to a scandal already saturated with horror.
That such an allegation existed in federal records for years without surfacing publicly raises an obvious question. How many other crimes committed at Zorro Ranch were quietly catalogued, redacted, and shelved while the architects of the cover-up assured the public that justice had been served?
For a man whose name is now synonymous with elite sex trafficking, Epstein managed to hold a 7,500-acre property in the New Mexico desert for twenty-six years without a single law enforcement agency setting foot on it for an investigative search. That fact alone should give any honest citizen pause.
Epstein bought the ranch in 1993 from three-time Democrat Gov. Bruce King and proceeded to construct a 26,000-square-foot mansion thirty miles from its nearest neighbor — the kind of isolation one chooses only when one has something to hide.
The first official search of the property took place in March of this year, six years after Epstein died in federal custody. Local New Mexico authorities, joined by state police and K-9 units, finally walked the grounds — long after any forensic evidence of the worst crimes had likely been scrubbed, paved over, or carried away in the dust. Stansbury herself put it bluntly when describing what she saw in the unredacted documents.
Source: SGT Report