In this video, Dr. G, a clinical and forensic psychologist, delves deep into the body language of Jeffrey Epstein’s March 17, 2010 deposition, focusing on the viral sequence where he's asked whether he ever socialized with Donald Trump “in the presence of females under the age of 18.”
Epstein first admits he did “socialize” with Trump, but later he invokes his Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights to remain silent.
Dr. G explores how these behavioral cues, avoidance of direct answers, tense facial expressions, and physical signs of stress, align with patterns seen in deceptive testimony or high-conflict emotional states.
A House Oversight subcommittee—overriding opposition from top GOP leadership, voted to subpoena both the DOJ for all Epstein-related files and Ghislaine Maxwell to testify under oath. Maxwell, serving a 20-year sentence, has reportedly shared names of around 100 individuals tied to Epstein during recent DOJ interviews; several lawmakers may explore clemency options in exchange for cooperation.
Meanwhile, internal divisions are growing: some conservative influencers now openly criticize Trump’s handling of the controversy, while traditional conservative media like Fox News downplay it, contrasting with the Wall Street Journal’s more investigative tone.
This media friction underscores a rare schism within the Murdoch sphere and broader conservative ecosystem. Amid all this, Trump has filed a $10 billion libel suit against the Wall Street Journal over a sexualized 2003 birthday greeting allegedly attributed to him, which he denies writing