Buried Truth Rising: Epstein Files Expose Victim Accounts of Forced Births and Stolen Infants—Linked to “Devil’s Breath” Plants Grown on Ranch, Fueling Fresh Demands for Zorro Searches
Hidden among Jeffrey Epstein’s unsealed personal writings are gut-wrenching testimonies from women who endured secret pregnancies at his isolated Zorro Ranch, only to have their babies torn away moments after birth. These accounts—detailing coercion, immediate separations, and infants treated as disposable “assets”—now pair disturbingly with evidence of toxic Angel’s Trumpet plants cultivated on the property, the source of scopolamine (“Devil’s Breath”), a drug capable of erasing memories and bending wills. With the ranch’s surrounding hills back under intense scrutiny and ground searches demanded anew, each released file peels away protection from long-rumored atrocities. The desert, silent for decades, stands poised to surrender its secrets.

The February 2026 DOJ document dump includes emails referencing “trumpet plants” in Epstein’s nursery and forwarded pieces extolling scopolamine’s mind-wiping effects—“eliminates free will,” one subject line reads. Known colloquially as “Devil’s Breath,” the alkaloid induces hallucinations, compliance, and profound amnesia—ideal, critics fear, for silencing victims during abuse or coercion. While no conclusive proof ties it to specific crimes, the cultivation interest aligns chillingly with survivor claims of disorientation and blackouts at the ranch.
Victim narratives add visceral horror. Diary-like entries and statements describe women trafficked to Zorro, impregnated against their will—often under Epstein’s eugenics-driven vision of engineering “superior” offspring—then stripped of their newborns. Babies were allegedly removed instantly, handed to surrogacy networks, elite adoptions, or worse, leaving mothers traumatized and silenced. One account recounts a delivery in isolation, the infant snatched before bonding could occur, the mother threatened into compliance. These echo broader allegations of a “baby farm” operation at the remote 7,600-acre site, where privacy and power shielded depravity.
The revelations have accelerated momentum. New Mexico’s “truth commission,” unanimously approved February 17, will interview survivors, identify guests, and examine state failures—armed with subpoenas and a deadline for reports by year-end. Attorney General Raúl Torrez’s reopened criminal probe seeks full federal access, while Public Lands Commissioner Stephanie Garcia Richard urges scans of nearby hills for potential burials tied to prior anonymous tips. Radar and cadaver dogs remain on standby amid fears the vast terrain concealed not just abuse but evidence of deaths or discarded lives.
As files continue emerging—toxic plants for control, pregnancies for profit, infants as pawns—the public confronts a web too monstrous for denial. The ranch’s new owners, who rebranded it a retreat, claim no prior police visits; yet allegations persist. Every layer stripped reveals deeper protection for the powerful.
The truth won’t stay buried much longer. With searches looming and testimonies mounting, Zorro Ranch’s lonely hills may soon speak—exposing horrors the desert guarded far too long.
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