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Epstein Accountant Spills on Payout to Alleged Trump Victim

The pedophile’s accountant was deposed by the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday.

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Jeffrey Epstein’s personal accountant appeared Wednesday before the House Oversight Committee, revealing that one of President Donald Trump’s victims received financial compensation from Epstein’s estate.

Mr. Khan was the latest person summoned to a closed-door hearing as part of the congressional investigation into the convicted sex offender.

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This accountant worked closely with Epstein for more than a decade but has not, until now, played a central role in the investigation.

Details of Mr. Khan’s testimony, like those of his predecessors, will be made public later, but Democratic Representative Suhas Subramaniam of Virginia shared his notes from the closed-door session on the X platform.

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“One of Trump’s victims received money from a victim support fund managed by Mr. Khan,” he wrote.

The congressman did not provide further details in his statement regarding the identity of the victim who received money from Epstein’s estate, nor the amount of the settlement.

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Mr. Subramaniam offered little explanation for his findings when he addressed reporters waiting outside the Capitol approximately two hours after the hearing began.

“One of Donald Trump’s victims received compensation from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate. We have confirmed that,” he stated.

When asked for further clarification, the Democratic congressman replied, “We wanted to confirm that some victims did receive compensation, and we have confirmed that.”

He did not reveal the identity of the woman who alleges she was sexually assaulted by Trump, nor the amount of the compensation received. He simply told reporters they should wait for the transcript of the hearing.

On Wednesday, Subramaniam also revealed that Khan had named five men who funded the Epstein Foundation: billionaire businessman Les Wexner, hedge fund manager Glenn Dubin, investor Steven Sinofsky, the wealthy Rothschild banking family, and private equity investor Leon Black.

The congressman also pointed out that Khan mentioned former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, an associate of Epstein, when questioning the accountant about heads of state or elected officials with financial ties to Epstein.

“People like Khan allow billionaires like Epstein to escape justice for crimes that 99.9% of Americans could not commit,” Subramaniam wrote in his post.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer corroborated some elements of Subramaniam’s account during a press conference held Wednesday in the Capitol lobby.

The Kentucky Republican said Khan answered all their questions and confirmed the names of five men who paid Epstein money.

“He said he thought Epstein made his fortune as a tax advisor and financial planner. So these were the five people who gave Epstein large sums of money,” Comer said.

Comer was quick to point out that Khan testified he never witnessed any transactions involving Trump or his family.

At least one woman accuses Trump of sexually assaulting her when she was 13 and has been interviewed four times by the FBI.

The Justice Department initially kept these interviews secret, releasing further details of the case only after they were revealed in the files.

In her FBI testimony, the woman claimed Trump forced her to have sex with him around 1984, after Epstein recruited her.

She stated that Epstein, a friend of Trump, began abusing her and forcing her into prostitution with multiple men when she was between 13 and 15 years old, after she responded to a babysitting ad posted by her mother, a real estate agent in South Carolina, in a folder provided to her clients.

Trump has repeatedly denied any involvement with Epstein. The White House called the woman’s allegations “completely unfounded.”

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