A survivor’s hands trembled as she fought back tears just steps from Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous Palm Beach mansion—the very place where her nightmare began. “They took everything from us… and the system that was supposed to protect us let the powerful walk away untouched,” she testified under oath.
Unacceptable: Brave Epstein survivors, including Roza, Courtney Wild, Jena-Lisa Jones, and Dani Hannah Bensky, stood before a House Oversight Democrats’ field hearing yesterday and delivered raw, emotional testimony. For the first time since the explosive 2026 files, their stories of grooming, repeated abuse, and devastating institutional betrayal entered the Congressional Record—exposing how the elite were shielded while young lives were destroyed.
Yet as these courageous women demanded full transparency and real justice, major TV networks offered little to no live coverage or prominent headlines. The silence from outlets that thrive on scandal is deafening.
What explosive truths are they still hiding—and who benefits from the blackout?

A survivor’s hands trembled as she fought back tears, standing just steps from the site of her nightmare—Jeffrey Epstein’s former Palm Beach mansion.
“They took everything from us… and the system that was supposed to protect us let the powerful walk away untouched,” she testified under oath during an emotional congressional field hearing on May 12, 2026.
In a powerful session held at West Palm Beach City Hall—less than three miles from the infamous mansion—brave Epstein survivors including Roza, Courtney Wild, Jena-Lisa Jones, and Dani Hannah Bensky shared raw accounts of grooming, repeated sexual abuse, and institutional betrayal. For the first time since the explosive 2026 Epstein files were released, their testimonies were formally entered into the Congressional Record.
The Democrat-led House Oversight Committee field hearing, described by organizers as a return to “the scene of the crime,” focused on the failures of the 2008 “sweetheart deal,” cover-ups, and how elite connections allegedly shielded perpetrators while young victims suffered.
Roza, who described being abused even while Epstein was under house arrest, broke down emotionally. Courtney Wild, recruited at age 14, recounted years of trauma and called for stronger victims’ rights protections. Other survivors highlighted ongoing retraumatization from the document releases and systemic protection of the powerful.
Courtney Wild (pictured above in past advocacy) and her fellow survivors demanded full transparency on remaining files and real accountability.
Despite the historic and deeply emotional nature of the hearing, major national television networks provided strikingly little live coverage or prominent headlines—raising questions about why such a significant moment in one of America’s most notorious scandals received such muted attention from outlets that typically amplify high-profile cases.
As these courageous women continue pushing for justice, the central question remains: What more will the full Epstein files reveal, and who continues to benefit from the silence?
Their voices are now permanently part of the congressional record, ensuring the fight for truth and reform cannot be easily ignored.


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