Juliette Bryant’s fingers trembled as she clutched the cherished photo of her younger self—barely 20, radiant and trusting, flanked by her only two boyfriends, the ones who loved her fiercely before the darkness descended—then contrasted it with the nightmare images from Epstein’s files. “This is me before he kidnapped me,” she whispered, voice laced with sorrow and steely determination. “Just two amazing boyfriends who still protect me to this day.”
In her latest gut-wrenching revelation, the Epstein survivor highlights those pre-trauma relationships that grounded her innocence, while zeroing in on the transgender doctor referenced in the documents—part of the shadowy medical network that treated victims amid alleged experiments and cover-ups. How does this figure connect to the horrors she endured on the island and beyond?
The personal ties and hidden names hint at even more buried truths waiting to surface.

Juliette Bryant’s fingers trembled as she clutched the cherished photo of her younger self—barely 20, radiant and trusting, flanked by her only two boyfriends, the ones who loved her fiercely before the darkness descended—then contrasted it with the nightmare images from Epstein’s files. “This is me before he kidnapped me,” she whispered, her voice laced with sorrow and steely determination. “Just two amazing boyfriends who still protect me to this day.”
In her latest gut-wrenching revelation, shared on X in early March 2026, the Epstein survivor highlights those pre-trauma relationships that grounded her innocence. Posting a photo of herself at 18 with one ex-boyfriend—whose relationship had ended before her encounter with Epstein—Bryant emphasized that she had only two boyfriends prior to the trafficking. She described them as “amazing guys” who have steadfastly protected her secrets and supported her through the aftermath, even years later, shielding her from further harm as she navigated the long silence before going public after Epstein’s 2019 death. This personal anchor of loyalty contrasts sharply with the betrayal and isolation she endured, underscoring how those early, healthy bonds helped preserve fragments of her pre-Epstein self amid years of trauma.
She also zeros in on the transgender doctor referenced in the documents—Dr. Jess Ting, a Mount Sinai plastic surgeon entangled in Epstein’s shadowy medical network that treated victims amid alleged experiments and cover-ups. Bryant has linked herself to undated DOJ photos showing a young woman receiving 35 stitches, ostensibly after an “ATV crash” on Little St. James. She identifies the black track pants with white stripes as hers from the abduction period, posting side-by-side images including one from Epstein’s New Mexico ranch, insisting no such accident occurred. Files show Ting treating the patient initially on Epstein’s Manhattan dining room table under portable lights, with coordination implying off-site New York care—despite the island origin claim—prompting her repeated question: “Why would they operate in NY if someone was injured on the island?”
Ting, who transitioned to leading Mount Sinai’s Center for Transgender Medicine and Surgery in 2016, visited Epstein’s island, received Epstein-linked funding (including a $50,000 grant directed toward transgender research), and appears in emails facilitating care for Epstein’s circle. While Ting has characterized his interactions as professional and limited—focused on plastic surgery before his specialization—the ties illuminate Epstein’s web of influential doctors who provided unconventional services, sometimes in non-medical venues, potentially masking or managing victim injuries.
Bryant’s verified account, detailed in interviews with CBS News, BBC, Sky News, and others, began in 2002 Cape Town. A psychology and philosophy student and part-time model, she was lured with modeling promises tied to Epstein’s connections, including Leslie Wexner of Victoria’s Secret. She met Epstein at a dinner involving Bill Clinton, Chris Tucker, and Kevin Spacey (none accused by her of wrongdoing). On his private jet, her passport was confiscated, assault began during takeoff, and she was trafficked to Little St. James for repeated rape, then shuttled to properties in New York, Palm Beach, Paris, and New Mexico until escaping around 2004.
How does this figure connect to the horrors she endured on the island and beyond? The medical network, including Ting, may represent a layer of control—treating injuries in ways that avoided scrutiny, possibly concealing abuse-related trauma under fabricated stories like the “ATV crash.” Bryant’s revelations—of protective boyfriends preserving her truth, mismatched clothing challenging official accounts, and a prominent transgender surgeon in victim-treatment files—hint at deeper complicity. These personal ties and hidden names expose buried truths: loyalty that endured, medical roles that obscured, and inconsistencies that demand full exposure in Epstein’s enduring legacy of power and silence.
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