In the sweltering heat of a July 2006 afternoon, a phone rang at the Palm Beach Police Department—one of the very first calls after news broke of Jeffrey Epstein’s investigation into the Sєxual abuse of teenage girls. On the line was Donald Trump, his voice urgent and relieved: “Thank goodness you’re stopping him—everyone has known he’s been doing this.”
Newly released FBI records from a 2019 interview with former Palm Beach police chief Michael Reiter reveal this striking moment. Trump didn’t just express graтιтude; he reportedly labeled Ghislaine Maxwell as Epstein’s “operative,” called her “evil,” and urged investigators to focus on her. He also shared that he’d already banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago after witnessing disturbing behavior and that Epstein’s reputation as “disgusting” was an open secret in New York and Palm Beach circles.
This revelation flips the long-standing narrative of Trump’s claimed ignorance about Epstein’s crimes, showing instead an early, proactive outreach to law enforcement at the dawn of the scandal. What else might these Epstein files uncover about powerful connections and hidden knowledge?

On a sweltering July afternoon in 2006, a phone rang at the Palm Beach Police Department—one of the very first calls after news broke of Jeffrey Epstein’s investigation into the Sєxual abuse of teenage girls. On the line was Donald Trump, his voice urgent and relieved: “Thank goodness you’re stopping him—everyone has known he’s been doing this.”
This revelation comes from newly released FBI records, based on a 2019 interview with former Palm Beach police chief Michael Reiter. According to the documents, Trump did not merely express graтιтude; he reportedly described Ghislaine Maxwell—Epstein’s close ᴀssociate—as Epstein’s “operative,” called her “evil,” and urged investigators to focus on her. Trump also shared that he had already banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago after witnessing disturbing behavior, and that Epstein’s reputation as “disgusting” was an open secret in elite circles in both New York and Palm Beach.
This account completely upends the long-standing narrative Trump has maintained for years: that he was unaware of Epstein’s crimes, viewing him only as a casual social acquaintance before cutting ties early on. Instead, the files show Trump proactively reached out to law enforcement right at the outset of the scandal—mere months after Epstein’s 2006 arrest on prosтιтution-related charges. The call occurred in July 2006, around the time the investigation details became public, and Reiter confirmed the details to the Miami Herald when asked.
Trump also told Reiter that he had once been in Epstein’s presence with underage girls around and “got the hell out of there” immediately. This aligns with his prior public statements about barring Epstein from Mar-a-Lago, though the original stated reason was that Epstein had tried to “poach” one of his staff members. Maxwell was later convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison for her role in recruiting and facilitating Epstein’s abuse of minors.
The incident raises larger questions about what else the Epstein files—now being declassified in batches under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (signed in 2025)—might reveal regarding powerful connections and concealed knowledge. Millions of pages from the U.S. Department of Justice, including FBI interviews, emails, and investigative records, have already shed light on Epstein’s network among the elite. They indicate that awareness of Epstein’s behavior was not entirely secret in certain high-society circles, even if many denied it.
These disclosures not only challenge Trump’s own accounts but also fuel speculation about other figures: from Bill Clinton (mentioned repeatedly in connection with Epstein’s flights) to various billionaires and politicians who appeared in his address book or on his private jet. However, no new evidence directly implicates Trump in the crimes; the documents primarily record his awareness and actions at the time.
The Epstein case remains a major stain on the American justice system, where the 2008 non-prosecution agreement allowed him to escape severe punishment. The newly released files may expose more about cover-ups, influence peddling, and hidden knowledge. How many other secrets are still waiting to surface? The answer may lie in the next batches of documents yet to be made public.