Hundreds of voices rose in defiant chants along a dusty New Mexico highway, where the imposing silhouette of Jeffrey Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch mansion stood in stark, chilling contrast to the open desert beauty Virginia Giuffre once described—despite calling it a “house of horrors.”
On International Women’s Day, her brother Sky Roberts—joined by his wife Amanda and brother Daniel Wilson—spoke out for the first time at the gates of the estate where Virginia endured brutal abuse. The late Virginia Giuffre, Epstein’s most prominent accuser who tragically died by suicide in April 2025, was honored as protesters rebuilt a roadside memorial recently removed and demanded the Trump administration release fully unredacted files exposing visitor names and alleged co-conspirators.
“It’s surreal,” Sky said, eyes fixed on the looming property, “but we’re here in unity, and we’re not going away—the survivors deserve the full truth.”
What hidden names and explosive details in those sealed documents could finally deliver long-overdue justice?

In the stark beauty of New Mexico’s high desert, hundreds of voices rose in defiant chants along the dusty stretch of N.M. 41, where the imposing silhouette of Jeffrey Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch mansion stood in chilling contrast to the open landscape Virginia Giuffre once described—despite branding it a “house of horrors” riddled with abuse.
On International Women’s Day, March 8, 2026, her brother Sky Roberts spoke out for the first time at the gates of the sprawling estate near Stanley, where Virginia endured brutal sexual trafficking and exploitation as a teenager. Joined by his wife Amanda and brother Daniel Wilson (also referenced in some accounts as David), Sky addressed the crowd of protesters who had caravanned from Albuquerque and beyond, organized by Women’s March and local advocates.
Virginia Giuffre, Epstein’s most prominent accuser, had publicly detailed her ordeals at Zorro Ranch and other properties, accusing Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and powerful associates—including Prince Andrew (with whom she settled a lawsuit)—of abuse. Her courage inspired many survivors to come forward, yet the lifelong trauma led to her tragic suicide in April 2025 at age 41 on her farm in Western Australia. Her posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl, further exposed the network’s horrors.
“It’s surreal,” Sky said, eyes fixed on the looming hacienda-style mansion amid the piñon hills. “But we’re here in unity, and we’re not going away—the survivors deserve the full truth.” The rally included rebuilding a roadside memorial of flowers, crosses, and tributes—recently and mysteriously removed—honoring victims in defiance of any attempt at erasure.
Protesters, including New Mexico lawmakers like Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, held signs and demanded the Trump administration’s Department of Justice fully unredacted Epstein files under the Epstein Files Transparency Act (signed November 2025). Over 3.5 million pages—plus images, videos, and tips—have been released since late 2025, with recent tranches fueling New Mexico’s reopened criminal probe. Attorney General Raúl Torrez ordered a search of the property on March 9, 2026, after federal disclosures highlighted unexamined allegations, including severe abuses at the ranch and even uncorroborated claims of buried victims in the surrounding hills.
The sealed or redacted portions could hold explosive details: detailed visitor logs from Epstein’s ownership era (pre-2019 sale), flight records to the private airstrip, emails, photos of high-profile guests at the nearly 10,000-acre estate, and evidence corroborating survivor accounts of trafficking and assaults there. Past documents mention names like Bill Clinton, Alan Dershowitz, Ehud Barak, and others who visited Epstein properties (many deny any wrongdoing or knowledge of crimes), but fuller unredacted versions might reveal more direct ties to Zorro Ranch abuses, potential co-conspirators, or overlooked investigative leads.
With state authorities now actively examining the site (current owners, the Huffines family, cooperating), a legislative “Epstein Truth Commission” in play, and family-led pressure mounting, these hidden names and details could finally deliver long-overdue justice—exposing impunity, validating survivors like Virginia, and holding the powerful accountable. As chants echoed into the vast desert, the rally stood as a powerful testament: the truth, once buried, may yet rise from the shadows.
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