Jeffrey Epstein Connection: Documented Social Relationship, 1992 Party Video, Later Distancing
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The relationship between Trump and Epstein was documented through photographs, a 1992 party video, Trump's 2002 New York magazine comment, and Epstein's own court documents. After Epstein's 2019 arrest on federal sex trafficking charges involving minors, documents in the case referenced Trump. A 2015 deposition of a Epstein associate indicated Trump was involved in social circles that intersected with Epstein's activities — though the deposition document was disputed. Trump denied involvement in any of Epstein's criminal activities, and no charges were brought against Trump in connection with Epstein. The nature and extent of the social relationship were documented; the 2019 distancing contradicted the warmth of the 2002 description.
Overview
Trump described Epstein in 2002 as someone who liked "beautiful women, many of them on the younger side." He said he had known Epstein for 15 years. He called him terrific. After Epstein's 2019 arrest on federal sex trafficking charges involving minors, Trump said he was not a fan and had had a falling out.
The documented facts are: a social relationship spanning years, a warm 2002 endorsement with a note about Epstein's preference for younger women, and subsequent distancing. The nature of Trump's knowledge of Epstein's crimes is not established.
The 2002 Quote
The New York magazine profile of Epstein was written while Epstein's crimes were not publicly known. Trump's quote reflected the social standing Epstein had achieved in elite Palm Beach and New York circles: wealthy, connected, cultivated by people who valued proximity to money and social access.
The specific phrase — "many of them on the younger side" — was noted when Epstein's crimes became fully known. Whether it reflected Trump's awareness of Epstein's criminal conduct or simply observation of the company Epstein kept at social events is unknown.
Acosta
The most consequential connection between Trump and Epstein was not their personal relationship — it was Trump's appointment of the prosecutor who had given Epstein an extraordinarily lenient plea deal.
Alexander Acosta negotiated the 2007 agreement while U.S. Attorney in South Florida. Under the deal, Epstein pleaded to state charges and served 13 months in a county jail with work release. His victims were not notified in advance, which a federal judge later found violated federal law. The deal shielded Epstein from federal prosecution.
Trump appointed Acosta Labor Secretary in 2017. Acosta served until the 2019 arrest renewed scrutiny of the deal he had made. He resigned.
What Is and Is Not Known
No charges were brought against Trump in connection with Epstein's crimes. Trump denied any knowledge of the crimes. The ban from Mar-a-Lago around 2005 is consistent with a genuine break.
What is documented: years of social contact, a warm 2002 public endorsement that included a reference to Epstein's attraction to younger women, and subsequent denial of closeness. The full nature of the relationship and what Trump knew is not established by the public record.
Timeline
Sequence of events
January 1, 1992
1992 Mar-a-Lago party — Trump and Epstein on video
A video obtained by NBC News in 2019 shows Trump and Epstein at a Mar-a-Lago party in 1992, dancing with women and appearing to be social acquaintances. Both men were prominent in Palm Beach and New York social circles.
January 1, 2002
Trump quotes Epstein as 'terrific guy' who likes younger women
In a New York magazine profile of Epstein, Trump says he has known Epstein for 15 years, calls him a 'terrific guy' who is 'a lot of fun,' and notes Epstein 'likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.'
January 1, 2005
Trump bans Epstein from Mar-a-Lago — reported falling out
Reports indicate Epstein was banned from Mar-a-Lago around 2005 after allegedly making inappropriate overtures to a member's daughter. This is consistent with Trump's later claim of a 'falling out' with Epstein.
June 1, 2007
Acosta's non-prosecution agreement — Epstein pleads to state charges
U.S. Attorney Alexander Acosta negotiates a non-prosecution agreement with Epstein, allowing him to plead to state prostitution charges and serve 13 months in a county jail with work release. Epstein's victims are not notified in advance, which is later found to have violated federal law.
January 1, 2017
Acosta appointed Labor Secretary
Trump appoints Alexander Acosta as Labor Secretary. Acosta, who had negotiated Epstein's lenient plea deal, is confirmed by the Senate. He serves until Epstein's 2019 arrest brings renewed scrutiny to the deal.
July 8, 2019
Epstein arrested on federal sex trafficking charges — Acosta resigns
Epstein is arrested by federal prosecutors in New York on sex trafficking charges involving minors. The arrest draws renewed attention to Acosta's 2007 deal. Acosta resigns as Labor Secretary. Trump says he had a falling out with Epstein 'a long time ago.'
July 25, 2019
Court documents mention Trump — nature of involvement disputed
Court documents in the Epstein case reference Trump in various contexts. The extent of Trump's involvement in any of Epstein's criminal activities is disputed; no charges are filed against Trump.
Sources
- ↑ Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump: A Documented Relationship — The New York Times
- ↑ Trump and Epstein: The full history of their documented relationship — The Washington Post
- ↑ Timeline of Trump-Epstein relationship — The Associated Press
- ↑ Jeffrey Epstein: International Moneyman of Mystery — New York Magazine
Verification