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Protest at Epstein’s New Mexico ranch: Virginia Giuffre’s brother leads calls for expanded investigation l

March 12, 2026 by hoang le Leave a Comment

As Sky Roberts drove toward the remote New Mexico highway, the infamous Zorro Ranch mansion rising like a dark specter against the rugged hills, a profound wave hit him—he could feel his late sister Virginia’s presence everywhere. “I just started looking around, and I could just feel her,” he later said, voice thick with grief.

For the first time, the brother of Virginia Giuffre—Jeffrey Epstein’s most outspoken accuser, who tragically died by suicide in April 2025—stood shoulder-to-shoulder with hundreds of protesters outside the gates of the sprawling estate where she endured horrific abuse. On International Women’s Day, Sky, joined by his wife Amanda and brother Daniel Wilson, led chants and held signs demanding the Trump administration release fully unredacted Epstein files, exposing visitor names and alleged abusers hidden in government cover-ups.

“This is a house of horrors,” Sky declared to the crowd, vowing the fight for truth and justice won’t stop.

What names in those sealed documents could shatter everything we thought we knew?

In the rugged, sun-drenched hills south of Santa Fe, along the quiet stretch of N.M. 41 near Stanley, Sky Roberts felt an overwhelming surge as he approached the former Zorro Ranch for the first time. The sprawling hacienda-style mansion—Jeffrey Epstein’s remote New Mexico estate, once a site of unimaginable abuse—rose like a dark specter against the piñon-dotted landscape. “I just started looking around, and I could just feel her,” Sky later recounted, his voice thick with grief, as if his late sister Virginia’s presence lingered in the very air.

Virginia Giuffre, Epstein’s most outspoken accuser, had courageously detailed the horrors she endured as a teenager, trafficked to powerful men at properties including this isolated ranch she sometimes called a “house of horrors.” Her allegations implicated figures like Prince Andrew (with whom she settled a lawsuit) and others, fueling a broader reckoning. Tragically, she died by suicide in April 2025 at age 41 on her farm in Western Australia, leaving a posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl, that continued exposing the abuse. Her family, including brothers Sky and Daniel Wilson, has carried her torch forward.

On International Women’s Day, March 8, 2026, Sky—joined by his wife Amanda and brother Daniel—stood shoulder-to-shoulder with hundreds of protesters who caravanned from Albuquerque and beyond. Organized by groups like Women’s March and local advocates, the rally featured chants, speeches, and a rebuilt roadside memorial of flowers and tributes, honoring survivors after a prior one was controversially removed. New Mexico lawmakers, including Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, joined the crowd in solidarity.

“This is a house of horrors,” Sky declared to the assembled demonstrators, his words echoing across the dusty shoulder. He and others held signs urging the Trump administration’s Department of Justice to release fully unredacted Epstein files—visitor logs, emails, flight records, and investigative materials—under the Epstein Files Transparency Act signed in November 2025. Millions of pages have been disclosed, including over 3.5 million by early 2026 with videos, images, and uncorroborated tips, but persistent redactions and withheld portions fuel accusations of government cover-ups protecting the elite.

The ranch, now under new ownership tied to Texas businessman Don Huffines’ family, has drawn renewed scrutiny. New Mexico’s Department of Justice reopened a probe in February 2026, launching a search of the property on March 9 amid fresh allegations from released files about abuses, trafficking, and even unverified claims of buried victims. Past documents mention invitations to prominent figures like Bill Clinton, Alan Dershowitz, Ehud Barak, and others—though many deny wrongdoing, and no new charges have stemmed directly from the ranch.

Sky vowed the fight won’t stop: “We’re not going away.” Protesters demanded transparency on who visited Zorro Ranch during Epstein’s era, where survivors allege some of the gravest abuses occurred. As the sun beat down and chants rose into the vast desert sky, the haunting question persists: What names in those sealed documents—high-profile visitors, alleged co-conspirators, or explosive connections—could shatter everything we thought we knew about power, impunity, and the long reach of Epstein’s network? With family like Sky refusing silence, state investigations intensifying, and public pressure mounting, the push for full revelation grows louder, promising that buried truths may yet emerge from the shadows.

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