URGENT: DOJ Deletes Epstein Files Again — And They Directly Implicate Trump
For the second time in just three days, the U.S. Department of Justice has removed major Jeffrey Epstein-related files from its own website.
The files weren’t minor. And they weren’t obscure.
They were explosive, with claims that Trump measured the tighness of little girls’ private parts. We saved it all before they were deleted. See yellow except below.
Both documents contained graphic allegations involving Donald Trump, tied to so-called “Calendar Girls” parties at Mar-a-Lago, events that were not invented out of thin air, but partially corroborated years ago by a 2016 New York Times investigation.
Now, those files are gone.
What Was Deleted
The two missing DOJ-hosted files are:
https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%2010/EFTA01660679.pdf
https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%2010/EFTA01660651.pdf
Both links now return missing-file errors, despite having been publicly accessible.
These documents included first-person allegations describing abuse involving underage girls, with Trump named directly in connection to Epstein-organized events.
The highlighted passages, now deleted, referenced “Calendar Girls” parties at Mar-a-Lago, alleging that young girls were brought in by Epstein and that Trump played a role in what occurred there.
Why the “Calendar Girls” Detail Matters
Here’s the part that makes the deletions impossible to brush off.
In 2016, The New York Times published a report detailing how Donald Trump hosted a “calendar girl” competition at Mar-a-Lago in 1992, organized by George Houraney at Trump’s request.
According to the Times, Houraney recalled that when the contestants arrived, the only guests present were Trump and Jeffrey Epstein.
That detail matters because the deleted DOJ files independently referenced “Calendar Girls” parties at Mar-a-Lago, creating a troubling overlap between documented historical reporting and allegations later preserved in federal records.
The DOJ didn’t just delete anonymous claims. It deleted material that intersected with previously reported facts.
Deletion Is Not Transparency
To be clear, the allegations in these files have not been adjudicated in court. But that’s precisely why their removal is so alarming.
Deleting records is not the same as disproving them.
When the government quietly removes files that name a former and possibly future president, especially files tied to one of the most notorious sex-trafficking cases in modern history, it raises a simple question:
What exactly is being protected here?
The DOJ has offered no public explanation for why these files were removed, why it happened twice in three days, or whether they will be restored.
Until then, the silence speaks loudly.
And once again, the Epstein case leaves us with fewer answers, and fewer records, than we had before.





This is pretty damning stuff.
Do you believe that Congress will finally move to impeach trump?
Perhaps we all need to wait until the midterm election is suspended because trump orders a nuclear strike on a major American city and declares martial law.