US First Lady Melania Trump delivering remarks regarding Jeffrey Epstein, at the White House in Washington, on April 9.PHOTO: REUTERS

Melania Trump denies any Epstein connection, seeks end to ‘lies’

· The Straits Times
  • Melania Trump denies any relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, calling claims linking them "lies" and defamatory.
  • She acknowledges casual correspondence with Ghislaine Maxwell but asserts no friendship with Epstein despite social circle overlap.
  • Trump urges a congressional hearing for Epstein's victims, clarifying she is not one, amid scrutiny of Epstein's connections.

WASHINGTON - US First Lady Melania Trump on April 10 denied that she had any relationship with Jeffrey Epstein and said she was not one of his victims, thrusting the Epstein matter back into the spotlight after her husband had sought to put it behind him.

She denied online speculation that the disgraced financier and sex offender had introduced her to Mr Donald Trump, saying she had met her husband at a New York City party in 1998, two years before crossing paths with Epstein at another event she attended with Mr Trump.

She also urged Congress to hold public hearings for Epstein victims to tell their stories under oath, raising the prospect of further public attention on an issue the president wants to go away.

“The lies linking me with the disgraceful Jeffrey Epstein need to end today,” Mrs Trump said, reading a statement and declining to take questions from reporters.

“I am not Epstein’s victim,” she said, responding to what she said were false smears against her.

Her extraordinary address, delivered under the presidential seal in the White House foyer, renews scrutiny of the Epstein case that has roiled Mr Trump’s presidency as even some supporters say his administration mishandled disclosures from government files.

Last week, the president fired Attorney General Pam Bondi, who had drawn the ire of Trump loyalists over the Justice Department’s slow release of millions of Epstein-related files.

Mr Trump, a onetime friend of Epstein who said he cut ties with the financier in the early 2000s, is among many famous people – celebrities, politicians and intellectuals – named in the government files.

Mrs Trump did not say why she chose to speak out on April 10, resurrecting an issue that had largely slipped from the headlines amid the US-Israeli war against Iran.

Mr Marc Beckman, her senior adviser, told Reuters in a statement: “First Lady Melania Trump spoke out now because enough is enough. The lies must stop.”

A spokesperson for the first lady said Mr Trump’s aides were made aware of her plans for the statement she made on April 10.

‘This took guts’

While first ladies have occasionally addressed the nation on political issues, Mrs Trump’s statement was exceptional.

“A first lady in contemporary times has not publicly addressed controversy in this way, and certainly never from the state floor of the White House, so this took guts,” said Mr Michael LaRosa, former press secretary to first lady Jill Biden.

“Melania is very intentional and deliberative on the frequency of her appearances, and I think this event is going to speak so loudly that I don’t think she will need to address this again,” Mr LaRosa added in an interview.

The first lady said she had never had a relationship with Epstein or his convicted associate Ghislaine Maxwell, with whom she said she had only a casual correspondence.

Mrs Trump said she first “crossed paths” with Epstein in 2000 at an event she attended with Mr Trump, five years before their marriage.

“At the time, I had never met Epstein and had no knowledge of his criminal undertakings,” she said.

Epstein, who pleaded guilty in 2008 to two Florida felonies, including procurement of a minor for prostitution, was facing federal charges of sex-trafficking minors in 2019, when he died in jail in what was ruled a suicide.

“I have never been friends with Epstein,” Mrs Trump said. “Donald and I were invited to the same parties as Epstein from time to time, since overlapping in social circles is common in New York City and Palm Beach.”

The first lady sidestepped a question earlier in 2026 about the victims of Maxwell at an event with former captives of Hamas in Gaza.

Mr Trump has sought for months to move past discussions about Epstein.

“I think it’s really time for the country to get on to something else, really, now that nothing came out about me,” he said in February.

Release of the files

The Trump administration, under pressure from the president’s political base, ordered the US Justice Department to release files tied to criminal probes of Epstein in compliance with a transparency law passed by Congress.

The files include a 2002 e-mail from Mrs Trump to Maxwell about a New York Magazine piece on Epstein.

“Nice story about JE in NY mag. You look great on the picture,” the e-mail reads. “Give me a call when you are back in NY.”

On April 10, Mrs Trump described her e-mail to Maxwell as just “casual correspondence”, and “a trivial note”.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll in January showed only 21 per cent of respondents approved of Mr Trump’s handling of the Epstein files.

A separate Reuters/Ipsos poll in February showed three-quarters of Americans – including two-thirds of Republicans -– believe the federal government is hiding information about the alleged clients of Epstein.

Around a dozen Epstein survivors opposed Mr Trump’s proposal for public hearings, saying in a statement they had already done enough to publicise Epstein’s crimes through testimony and reports and that it was up to the US Justice Department to follow through. They also called on the Trump administration to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act. REUTERS