A federal judge in New York overseeing a lawsuit between Jeffrey Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre and his convicted accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell ordered the unsealing of dozens of names connected to the disgraced financier.
A second batch of files has been made public after Giuffre's lawyers uploaded 40 previously redacted documents Wednesday evening. U.S. District Judge Loretta Preska ordered their release in December but gave the Jane and John Does two weeks in case they wanted to appeal.
Documents unsealed Thursday included more mentions of former President Bill Clinton, who is not accused of wrongdoing, British Prince Andrew, who was accused of wrongdoing, a lengthy collection of emails to and from Giuffre, and more.
In response to a motion to quash a subpoena from a reporter named Sharon Churcher, Maxwell's lawyers accused the journalist of helping Giuffre "concoct" allegations against Prince Andrew and the attorney Alan Dershowitz, and acting as a "friend."
JEFFREY EPSTEIN DOCUMENTS: FIVE REVELATIONS IN GHISLAINE MAXWELL LAWSUIT
Separately, in an email exchange between Churcher and Giuffre, the Epstein accuser wrote that she was afraid to discuss her case with Vanity Fair because she'd heard that "B.Clinton walked into VF and threatened them not to write sex-trafficing (sic) articles about his good friend J.E."
A spokesperson for Clinton did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the latest allegation but shared a link to a Telegram report in which former Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter said that "categorically did not happen."
On Wednesday, the spokesperson told Fox News Digital that Clinton and Epstein "did not have a close personal relationship."
"l wouldn't want to give tbc (sic) public a bad image or anything like that," Giuffre wrote before thanking Churcher for helping her "deal with the "viciousness of todays world!!"
JEFFREY EPSTEIN DOCUMENTS: SEE FIRST 40 UNSEALED FILES IN GHISLAINE MAXWELL LAWSUIT
Nothing should be suppressed. From the beginning, I have demanded release of everything because I have nothing to hide.
Churcher was the sole source regarding the original Epstein story from Giuffre, according to one of the filings. She could not immediately be reached for comment.
"She was actively and personally involved in changing those stories over time and in the creation and addition of new salacious details about public figures, including the fabrication of Alan Dershowitz’s alleged sexual relations with Plaintiff," the document said.
Epstein was accused of forcing a minor girl to have sexual relations with Dershowitz, a prominent criminal defense attorney. Dershowitz has denied all allegations against him related to Epstein, his former client.
"There are smoking guns that are not being released," the former Harvard Law professor told Fox News Digital Thursday. "They relate to credibility — and lack thereof— of some accusers and some accused. I have seen these suppressed documents. Nothing should be suppressed. From the beginning, I have demanded release of everything because I have nothing to hide."
Another document included allegations that Tony Figueroa, a witness in the case, testified that he saw Maxwell escorting "young girls" to Epstein's home "for sex acts," and that Maxwell asked him to bring girls over as well.
The names were previously sealed or redacted in documents from a 2015 lawsuit Giuffre leveled against Maxwell, who has since been convicted of criminal sex trafficking charges in federal court. The parties settled in 2017, but the unsealing process has dragged on for years.
Graphic content warning: 70 pages of unsealed emails
In another document, which included portions of the deposition of an unidentified minor victim of Epstein, she recounted how Epstein summoned her to his bedroom and "something horrible happened."
"I don't recall exactly how I was propositioned to get there," she said. "I just was there, and all of a sudden something horrible happened to me."
She was between 15 and 17 years old at the time, according to her statements in the transcript. She said she later learned that "they would receive kickbacks for bringing people over" to Epstein's house, and that the sex trafficker had asked her to bring friends over and paid her to "hang out" at his Florida mansion.
See the faces mentioned in Epstein documents
Thursday's filings also included Giuffre's witness list, which sought more than 90 people to testify in the case, including Epstein, Maxwell, Clinton and a number of Epstein's other victims and employees.
The document also listed Epstein's highly sought-after "black book" as evidence in the case.
Read Virginia Giuffre's witness list
The first file dump contained few surprises, aside from an anecdote about David Copperfield performing "magic tricks" at a dinner at one of Epstein's mansions and a bizarre reference to the late physicist Stephen Hawking and "underage orgies."
About 240 documents are expected to be unsealed in total. Judge Preska is also weighing arguments from additional Does who are seeking to have their names withheld from future disclosures.
Maxwell is appealing her criminal convictions.
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Anyone who suspects trafficking can call the National Human Trafficking Hotline at (888) 373-7888.
Fox News' Louis Casiano, Sarah Rumpf, Greg Wehner, Lorraine Taylor and Brie Stimson contributed to this report.