As Sky Roberts approached the gates of Jeffrey Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch for the first time, a powerful sensation washed over him—he could feel his late sister Virginia’s presence surrounding him amid the rugged New Mexico hills. “I just started looking around, and I could just feel her,” he said, emotion raw in his voice.
On International Women’s Day, the brother of Virginia Giuffre—Epstein’s most prominent accuser, who tragically died by suicide in April 2025—stood with hundreds of protesters outside the sprawling estate, urging a full, unredacted government probe into the case. Flanked by his wife Amanda and other family, Sky held signs condemning cover-ups and demanding the release of documents revealing visitors and alleged abusers at the “house of horrors” where Virginia endured severe abuse.
Chants for justice rose as the crowd honored victims, insisting the truth must finally emerge.
What explosive revelations could those sealed files still hold—and will they ever see the light of day?

As Sky Roberts approached the gates of Jeffrey Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch for the first time, a powerful sensation washed over him amid the rugged New Mexico hills—he could feel his late sister Virginia’s presence surrounding him. “I just started looking around, and I could just feel her,” he said, emotion raw in his voice, as the hacienda-style mansion loomed on the piñon-dotted hillside like a grim sentinel.
On International Women’s Day, March 8, 2026, Sky—brother of Virginia Giuffre, Epstein’s most prominent accuser—stood with hundreds of protesters outside the sprawling estate near Stanley. Virginia had courageously alleged years of sex trafficking and abuse as a teenager at Epstein’s properties, including this remote ranch she described as a “house of horrors.” Her accusations implicated powerful figures like Prince Andrew (settled out of court) and others. Tragically, she died by suicide in April 2025 at age 41 on her farm in Western Australia, her family attributing it to lifelong trauma from the abuse. Her posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl, continued amplifying survivor stories.
Flanked by his wife Amanda and other family members, including brother Daniel Wilson, Sky held signs condemning government cover-ups and demanding the Trump administration’s Department of Justice release fully unredacted Epstein files. Under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, millions of pages—including investigative materials, emails, photos, and uncorroborated tips—have been disclosed since late 2025, with recent tranches in early 2026 revealing details tied to Zorro Ranch. Yet significant redactions remain, shielding visitor names, flight logs, and potential evidence of abuses at the isolated property.
Protesters, including activists from Women’s March, survivors’ supporters, and New Mexico lawmakers like Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, chanted for justice and honored victims with a roadside memorial of flowers and tributes. The rally followed renewed scrutiny: New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez reopened a criminal probe in February 2026 after federal file releases highlighted unexamined allegations, including claims of severe abuses and even unverified reports of buried victims. State investigators searched the ranch on March 9, 2026, with cooperation from current owners—the family of Texas businessman Don Huffines—seeking to corroborate survivor testimonies.
Sky declared the site a place of horrors where truth must emerge, vowing the family would persist: “We’re not going away.” The crowd insisted silenced survivors deserve answers.
What explosive revelations could those sealed files still hold—detailed visitor logs naming high-profile guests during Epstein’s ownership, corroborating evidence of trafficking at the ranch, or connections to unprosecuted associates? Past documents mention figures like Bill Clinton, Alan Dershowitz, and Ehud Barak (many deny wrongdoing), but full unredacted versions could expose more, potentially shattering narratives of impunity.
With state probes intensifying, a legislative “truth commission” underway, and public pressure mounting from events like this rally, will they ever see the light of day? The desert’s vast silence echoed the protesters’ resolve: justice delayed is not justice denied, and the push for transparency grows unrelenting.
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