Sex trafficker and disgraced billionaire Jeffrey Epstein had a hidden surveillance room in his New York mansion where his victims and guests were secretly monitored, according to accusations in a recent lawsuit.
The lawsuit, filed Friday by two of Epstein’s accusers, said that Epstein would also monitor his abuse victims using car services and cell phones so he could track them, find “dirt” on them, or offer huge amounts of “hush money” to silence them.
According to The New York Post report on the explosive accusations:
The details were laid bare in the new civil suit — filed in Manhattan federal court — that alleges the “complex, sophisticated sex-trafficking venture” Epstein was able to operate for years wouldn’t have been possible without two of the disgraced financier’s closest advisers: personal lawyer Darren Indyke and accountant Richard Kahn.
Epstein accuser Danielle Bensky and another woman, identified only as Jane Doe 3, filed a complaint against the two men … alleging they helped build the “complex financial infrastructure” that Epstein relied on to sexually abuse hundreds of teens and young women.
According to the report, the two women said Indyke and Kahn were “well aware” of Epstein’s crimes and the two “knowingly and intentionally benefitted” from the operation.
“Knowing that they would earn millions of dollars in exchange for facilitating Epstein’s sex abuse and trafficking, Indyke and Kahn chose money and power over following the law,” the lawsuit said.
“Indyke and Kahn’s knowing facilitation, participation, and concealment of Epstein’s illegal conduct allowed Epstein to successfully rape, sexually assault, and coercively sex traffic Danielle Bensky and Jane Doe 3.”
Both Indyke and Kahn have denied wrongdoing.
The two were “extraordinarily surprised and disappointed” by the lawsuit their lawyer called “factually baseless and legally frivolous” in a statement to The Post.
“Neither Mr. Indyke or Mr. Kahn has ever been found in any forum to have committed any misconduct, and they emphatically reject the allegations of wrongdoing contained in the complaint,” their lawyer said.
The lawsuit reportedly does not address what happened to the alleged surveillance footage, or if Epstein kept or spread any secret footage of activities inside the New York mansion.
Questions about the existence of blackmail footage have circulated for years.
One of Epstein’s accusers, Sarah Ransome, once claimed she had access to secret sexual recordings of former President Bill Clinton, former President Donald Trump, Prince Andrew, and more.
Ransome later asked to retract her claim and “walk away” from the accusations. She “invented” the alleged tapes, she said.
Trump, Clinton, and Prince Andrew have all repeatedly denied any involvement with Epstein’s sex trafficking ring and forcefully condemned the accusations.
The Horn editorial team