A blackboard inside Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous private island home was covered with a cryptic jumble of single words scrawled in white chalk — including a few eyebrow-raising messages possibly alluding to the pedophile’s sex trafficking ring, newly released images revealed.
The photos were among a trove of “never-before-seen” content published by the Democrats on the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday, featuring images and videos of the late pervert’s mansion on Little St. James in the US Virgin Islands.
One snapshot shows a room of Epstein’s study with a blackboard, which was adorned with the handwritten words “political,” “plots,” “deception,” “power,” “truth,” and “music” alongside a few others that were indecipherable.

Some words, like “music,” were underlined while others had lines connecting them, though it’s unclear what any of it meant.
The word scramble only took up a fraction of the blackboard, which stretched from one column to another between rows of bookshelves in the study.
Other eerie images provided an inside look at rooms with bizarre decor, including one that had a dentist’s chair smack in the middle and walls lined with what appear to be masks of notorious historical figures.


California Rep. Robert Garcia, a ranking member on the Oversight Committee, said that the team was releasing the fresh content “to ensure public transparency” and “to help piece together the full picture of Epstein’s horrific crimes.”
“We won’t stop fighting until we deliver justice for the survivors,” Garcia said.
Epstein allegedly groomed and abused young women and girls, some as young as 14, on the island alongside swaths of the world’s most powerful politicians and businessmen.

But the images were previously published by O’Keefe Media, House Oversight Republicans noted.
Still, the lefty members of the committee made the pictures and videos available on X and insisted that any curious naysayers should “see for yourself.”
Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act on Nov. 19, which requires that the US Justice Department release the documents within 30 days of its enactment. President Trump ratified the bill that same day, meaning the Justice Department has until Dec. 19 to release the files.
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