Jeffrey Epstein survivor 'redeemed' by release of her 1996 FBI complaint
- - Jeffrey Epstein survivor 'redeemed' by release of her 1996 FBI complaint
Erin Mansfield, USA TODAYDecember 22, 2025 at 7:43 AM
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The FBI received a complaint about Jeffrey Epstein in 1996, nearly a decade before they investigated his activities in Florida and more than two decades before the Department of Justice brought sex trafficking charges.
The complaint was made public as part of a larger document release Dec. 19 under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The document is redacted so that the complainant is not named, but Maria Farmer and her lawyer quickly identified it as hers.
āComplainant stated that she is a professional artist and took pictures of her sisters 12 and 16 years for her own personal artwork,ā the FBI complaint form says in handwritten notes without a visible agent signature. āEpstein stole the photos and is believed to have sold the pictures to potential buyers.
āEpstein at the time requested [redacted] to take pictures of young girls at swimming pools,ā the notes continued. āEpstein is now threatening [redacted] that if she tells anyone about the photos he will burn her house down.ā
the Epstein Files Transparency Act outside the U.S. Capitol on November 18, 2025 in Washington, DC. The House is expected to vote today on the legislation, which instructs the U.S. Department of Justice to release all files related to the late accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
" style=padding-bottom:56%>Epstein abuse survivor Danielle Bensky holds up a photo of her younger self during a news conference with lawmakers on the Epstein Files Transparency Act outside the U.S. Capitol on November 18, 2025 in Washington, DC. The House is expected to vote today on the legislation, which instructs the U.S. Department of Justice to release all files related to the late accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
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Epstein abuse survivor Danielle Bensky holds up a photo of her younger self during a news conference with lawmakers on the Epstein Files Transparency Act outside the U.S. Capitol on November 18, 2025 in Washington, DC. The House is expected to vote today on the legislation, which instructs the U.S. Department of Justice to release all files related to the late accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
">Epstein abuse survivor Danielle Bensky holds up a photo of her younger self during a news conference with lawmakers on the Epstein Files Transparency Act outside the U.S. Capitol on November 18, 2025 in Washington, DC. The House is expected to vote today on the legislation, which instructs the U.S. Department of Justice to release all files related to the late accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
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1 / 14Alleged victims of Jeffrey Epstein rally at Capitol Hill to demand release of files
Epstein abuse survivor Danielle Bensky holds up a photo of her younger self during a news conference with lawmakers on the Epstein Files Transparency Act outside the U.S. Capitol on November 18, 2025 in Washington, DC. The House is expected to vote today on the legislation, which instructs the U.S. Department of Justice to release all files related to the late accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein.
The document is dated Sept. 3, 1996. Jeffrey Epstein is clearly identified as the subject of the complaint, and the case is listed as āchild pornography,ā a legal term for child sexual abuse material.
Farmer, who has also accused Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell of sexually assaulting her, said in a statement that the day the document was released was one of the best of her life.
āIām crying for two reasons,ā said Farmer, now 56. āI want everyone to know that I am shedding tears of joy for myself, but also tears of sorrow for all the other victims that the FBI failed.ā
USA TODAY reached out to the Department of Justice for comment.
Maria Farmer alleged Epstein, Maxwell stole images of her sisters
Possession of child sexual abuse material has been a federal crime in the United States since 1978, and Congress strengthened the law in 1984 under President Ronald Reagan. By 1996, the internet was being used more widely to distribute the material.
Jennifer Freeman, Farmerās lawyer, said Farmer had nude or semi-nude hard-copy pictures of her two younger sisters that were intended as anatomical studies for her graduate school art class. Freeman said Farmer kept them catalogued in a lockbox, so she knew when they went missing.
Annie Farmer, one of Maria Farmer's younger sisters, is seen in 2025 holding up a picture of them together when they were teenagers.
Farmer worked for Epstein as an art scout in 1996 in New York City, but Epstein and Maxwell encouraged her to spend the summer at Epsteinās property in Ohio as an artist in residence, according to a lawsuit Farmer filed in May alleging that the government was negligent in responding to her complaints. Epstein's property was on or adjacent to an estate owned by Victoriaās Secret magnate Les Wexner, the lawsuit says.
While staying in Ohio in late July or early August 1996, Farmer says Epstein and Maxwell sexually assaulted her, the lawsuit said. She found that the lockbox she had hidden in the basement with pictures of her sisters had been pried open, and those images were missing, Freeman said. āEpstein and Maxwell, for their and perhaps othersā sexual gratification, transported these images via airplane from Ohio to New York,ā the lawsuit says.
Freeman said Farmer reported all of this information to the FBI.
Moving child pornography from one state to another is a federal offense, according to the Department of Justice. Freeman said it would also be a federal crime to upload the material to a computer.
Epsteinās flight logs show he flew out of Columbus, Ohio, the nearest airport to his Ohio property, multiple times in August and September of 1996, including to Teterboro, New Jersey, just outside of New York City.
USA TODAY reached out to Maxwellās lawyer for comment. The Department of Justice has appeared for the case but not yet filed a response to the negligence allegations, the court docket shows.
Farmer first reported her sexual assault, crimes she believed Epstein and Maxwell were commiting against minors, and the child sexual abuse material allegations on Aug. 29, 1996 to the New York Police Department, according to the lawsuit, which cites a copy of her police report. The police advised her to call the FBI, and she made at least two calls to two different offices, the lawsuit says. The FBI complaint released Dec. 19 is stamped with the date Sept. 3, 1996.
Epstein wasn't charged for child pornography
Freeman said the federal government should have investigated and charged Epstein for child pornography-related crimes decades ago. She said the FBI had a responsibility to pay attention to child pornography allegations, and that type of crime is logistically easier to prove than sexual assault or trafficking.
āYou have usually video or still images, evidence, rather than trying to get witnesses to say this or that,ā said Freeman, who is also the chair of CHILD USAdvocacy. āYou actually have the proof, so the prosecution is relatively easy.ā
A decade later, in 2007, then-Assistant U.S. Attorney Anne Marie VillafaƱa made multiple attempts to get computers and hard drives from Epsteinās property, according to a 2020 report from the Department of Justice Office of Professional Responsibility.
VillafaƱa knew from her experience that people who exploited minors often possessed child sexual abuse material, the report said. Her colleague commented that it would be unusual for someone with Epsteinās capabilities not to be video recording his encounters, the report said.
Epsteinās lawyers fought efforts to turn over his computers and hard drives and said they were working to make sure the case was prosecuted at the state level in Florida, the report said. But in September 2007, his lawyers signed the now-infamous non-prosecution agreement that allowed him to plead guilty to two lesser, state-level crimes: solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of prostitution from a minor.
The Department of Justice charged Epstein with sex trafficking in 2019 for alleged crimes in New York and Florida, but there were no child pornography charges in the indictment. In July, the Department of Justice and the FBI said its files related to Epstein include "over ten thousand downloaded videos and images of illegal child sexual abuse material and other pornography."
Marina Lacerda, victim of late financier Jeffrey Epstein, reacts following a press conference to discuss the Epstein Files Transparency bill, directing the release of the remaining files related to the investigations into Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 3, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
Marina Lacerda, who identified herself this year as an unnamed minor victim first recruited in 2002, said Epsteinās home on 71st Street in New York City was full of cameras, and there was a whole office in the front of the house dedicated to them.
Maria Farmer is still fighting for documents
Freeman said she made multiple attempts to get a copy of the 1996 complaint about child pornography from the FBI, but without success. The response to her most recent request under the Freedom of Information Act told her to expect a response in November 2027.
In May 2023, she asked the FBI, the Department of Justiceās inspector general, and the attorney general to do an investigation into how law enforcement handled the Epstein case. The inspector published a similar report into the handling of the sex abuse case of Larry Nassar, the USA Gymnastics doctor convicted on state and federal charges for sexual assault and child pornography, respectively.
Annie Farmer, a victim of late financier Jeffrey Epstein and sister of another victim, Maria Farmer, speaks on the day of a rally in support of Epstein's victims, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., September 3, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
Freeman said she was unsatisfied with a response from the Department of Justice in December 2024 that she said deemed Farmerās concerns addressed without performing a similar investigation. This past May, they filed a civil lawsuit alleging the government was negligent. They're seeking unspecified financial damages.
Despite feeling vindicated by the release of the 1996 document, Freeman said there are more documents that need to come out. Farmerās lawsuit says she made "at least two calls to two different offices" to report her allegations that went beyond the child sexual abuse material, including of her sexual assault.
Specifically, Farmerās lawsuit says she told the FBI about explicit images of children that Epstein had in his home, a binder the appeared to contain child sexual abuse material that he kept in a safe, and that Epstein had ārecording devices and sophisticated computer monitoringā throughout his New York City home.
The FBI hung up on her while she was mid-sentence, the lawsuit says. Documentation proving the second interaction was not produced in the Dec. 19 document release, the deadline for the Department of Justice to publish all of the Epstein files.
āItās almost like another type of abuse,ā Lacerda said. āWe werenāt being heard."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Epstein files show Maria Farmer reported him to the FBI in 1996
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