When the U.S. Department of Justice continued declassifying Jeffrey Epstein’s files in February 2026, one category of material sent shockwaves across the internet: dozens of “audition” videos showing young women performing semi-nude catwalks. These are not rumors or distant testimony — they are direct footage of girls strutting, turning, and posing before a camera in minimal clothing, exactly as one would expect in a legitimate modeling casting. But the context reveals something far darker: this was Epstein’s standard method for identifying and ensnaring victims.

Epstein frequently claimed connections to major fashion houses like Victoria’s Secret to gain access to aspiring models. The videos — seized from his devices — show he received a steady stream of such clips from the United States, Europe, Asia, and beyond. Each recording is brief: a girl walks forward, spins, poses, sometimes smiling nervously. The outfits are deliberately revealing; the environments are informal and unsettling — low light, plain walls, no professional crew. Authorities have redacted faces and identifying features, yet the footage remains powerful evidence of a grooming pipeline disguised as career opportunity.
Survivors have long described the same sequence: an invitation to “audition,” promises of big contracts and industry exposure, then escalating demands. In some clips, initial confidence gives way to visible discomfort — eyes darting, movements stiffening — as boundaries are tested. The sheer number of videos suggests Epstein’s operation was vast and systematic, collecting “portfolio” material to evaluate and select victims.
The public response has been explosive. Social media platforms are flooded with reaction videos, analysis threads, and demands for full disclosure. Hashtags like #EpsteinFiles and #ProtectTheVictims trend globally. People are asking hard questions: Why has this material only surfaced now? Who recorded and forwarded these clips? And why are so many details still obscured? Advocacy organizations are pressing for expanded probes into recruiters, enablers, and any powerful individuals once connected to Epstein.
The international scope is undeniable. Some videos carry visual clues suggesting locations abroad — luxury residences, hotel rooms, private estates. The consistent pattern across all of them — promise of fame, request for revealing “test” footage, then exploitation — exposes a deliberate, borderless system.
These catwalk recordings are not just courtroom exhibits; they are haunting visual testimony from girls who believed they were chasing a future. Released (even in censored form), they force society to confront what was long ignored: the intersection of wealth, power, and predation in industries that should have offered protection.
The outrage is not subsiding. Each view, each share, renews the demand: no more cover-ups, no more redactions, no more silence. The girls in those videos — whatever their names — deserve full justice. And as long as these images circulate, the Epstein case cannot be closed. It remains a living wound, demanding the truth be laid bare completely.
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