The Daily - ‘He Knew’: What Epstein Said About Trump in New Emails
Episode Date: November 13, 2025Thousands of pages of newly released emails between Jeffrey Epstein and his associates have put the convicted sex offender’s relationship with President Trump back in the spotlight.David Enrich and ...Michael Gold, who have been covering the story, explain what the new documents tell us and discuss whether they could prompt the release of the rest of the Epstein files.Guest: David Enrich, a deputy investigations editor for The New York Times.Michael Gold, a congressional correspondent for The New York Times.Background reading: Mr. Trump said the Democrats were bringing up the Epstein “hoax” to deflect from the government shutdown.House Republicans asserted that the emails revealed little information.Photo: Doug Mills/The New York TimesFor more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday. Subscribe today at nytimes.com/podcasts or on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. You can also subscribe via your favorite podcast app here https://www.nytimes.com/activate-access/audio?source=podcatcher. For more podcasts and narrated articles, download The New York Times app at nytimes.com/app.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From the New York Times, I'm Rachel Abrams, and this is the Daily.
Thousands of pages of newly released emails between Jeffrey Epstein and his friends and associates have put the financiers' relationship with President Trump back into the spotlight.
Today, my colleagues David Enrich and Michael Gold on what these new documents tell us, and whether they could trigger the relationship.
release of the rest of the Epstein files.
It's Thursday, November 13th.
So, David, you're back on the show to talk to us about the latest chapter in this ongoing saga about the relationship between Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein.
And today, Wednesday, it seems like there was a very meaningful update to our understanding about that relationship.
But can you just break it down for us?
How significant were the revelations that came out today?
Extremely significant, I would say.
Okay, walk us through what happened.
So we woke up this morning to the news that Democrats on the House Oversight Committee
had released three emails from Jeffrey Epstein's email account in which he and others
were talking about Donald Trump.
And the emails appeared to show that Epstein recognized that he had some important
information about his relationship with Trump and Trump's relationship with women or
girls. And just as we were all starting to kind of decipher the cryptic wording in those
messages, the Republicans on the House Oversight Committee won up their Democratic counterparts
and released additional Epstein-related emails, many of which are also about Donald Trump
or at least mentioned Donald Trump. And so we've been spending what feels like in eternity
today going through these emails one by one, reading them, trying to make sense of them,
and trying to understand their implications for Trump and his administration.
Okay, let's go one by one and start with the beginning of the day, the first emails that you saw.
Can you tell us what those emails were?
Sure. I can read them to you. I've got them in front of me if you want me to.
Yes, please.
Okay, so there's three of them. The first is from April of 2011.
And this is a time just contextually when Epstein had only recently been released from house arrest as part of his punishment for having solicited prostitution from a minor.
He's seeking to kind of repair his reputation and he's thinking about trying to get his guilty plea overturned.
And he writes to his longtime associate, Galane Maxwell, I want you to realize that the dog that has not barked is Trump.
And then there's a victim's name redacted.
she spent hours at my house with him.
He has never once been mentioned.
Gleine Maxwell responds,
I have been thinking about that.
And Trump at this point is a reality TV star in 2011
who has these vague and kind of unrealistic presidential ambitions.
But it's a little unclear why at that point Epstein
thought that the information he had on Trump was relevant.
And so we are all left wondering exactly what this means.
And just so I understand,
the dog that hasn't barked is Trump.
means or implies that there's some kind of information that hasn't been made public.
And so this email is interesting because it suggests that Epstein knows things about Trump.
Do I have that right?
As best we can tell, yes, that is right.
Epstein appears to believe that he has some information on Trump that has not yet become public and that could be useful to Epstein.
Or at least he's trying to portray that he does.
Yes, that's right.
So what's the next email?
So the next email is from December of 2015, and it's between Epstein and a journalist named Michael Wolf, who is quite a prominent journalist who had clearly spent a lot of time with Epstein.
And this takes place right as CNN is planning to air a debate involving the Republican presidential candidates, including Trump.
And Wolf, he says he hears that CNN is going to ask Trump about his relationship with Epstein.
Epstein then responds, if we were able to craft an answer for him, what do you think it should be?
Wolf then responds to that in a very telling way, which is, I think you should let him hang himself.
If he says he hasn't been on the plane or to the house, then that gives you a valuable PR and political currency.
You can hang him in a way that potentially generates a positive benefit for you, or if it really looks like he could win, you could save him, generating a debt.
And so he's floating this idea that Epstein has enough of the kind of the goods on Donald Trump that he can almost cultivate him as someone who's in his debt and that he can then presumably cash that debt in at a relevant point in the future.
Michael Wolf, of course, is a journalist who's authored multiple books about President Trump.
What do you make of the fact that it seems like he is giving Epstein PR advice in this moment?
This is not the way that journalists traditionally operate.
We regard sources as sources, not as clients, and it appears that he is given not just some advice to Epstein, but really kind of sitting alongside him, coaching him on how he can use information that he has on a major party presidential candidate as leverage.
To say this is a violation of traditional journalistic ethics and standards would be an understatement.
Aside from the questionable journalistic ethics of Michael Wolfe, this exchange seems to suggest something similar to the first email you read, right, that Epstein has something on Trump, or at least is trying to show that he does.
But just to be clear, we don't know what, if anything, Epstein actually had over Trump.
We know that he was making it seem like he had some kind of leverage, but we don't actually know whether he had any information that Trump would have legitimately been concerned about, right?
Well, I'm not sure that is right. Look, the relationship between Epstein and Trump, we know a lot about it now in 2025, but back a decade ago, we knew next to nothing about it. And what we now know is that Trump in the 80s and 90s and into the early 2000s was pretty good friends with Epstein. And they were moving in the same social circles. They were both pursuing at point some of the same young women. So, you know, at this point in Trump's career in 2015, he is obviously very well known, but a
lot of the things that have come to define him and his relationships with women, such as
the E. Jean Carroll allegations or the Access Hollywood tape, all of that stuff was in the future at
this point. And so I think from Epstein's perspective, the fact that he has a lot of experience
having been around Trump and seeing him interacting with women, I think that that is the kind
of thing that Epstein sitting there in 2015 can see as potentially very useful information that
he could use to gain some sort of leverage over this guy who,
is all of a sudden a leading candidate to become president of the United States.
Okay, tell us about the final email that House Democrats released on Wednesday morning.
Yeah, so this one is maybe the most cryptic of the bunch.
This is another email from Epstein to Michael Wolfe.
It's written in early 2019, so several months before Epstein was arrested for the final time.
And what we see in the email is there's apparently a victim's name, which is redacted.
then it says Mar-a-Lago, then there's something else that's redacted, and then it says Trump said he asked me to resign, never a member ever. Of course he knew about the girls as he asked Galane to stop. And so there's a certain amount here that we know contextually what he's referring to. And Trump has said publicly that he severed ties with Epstein because Epstein, quote, stole a girl from Mar-a-Lago. And that's a reference to Virginia Joufrey.
who was a spa assistant at Mar-a-Lago, who became one of Epstein's victims.
And Trump has said repeatedly that he threw Epstein out as a member of Mar-a-Lago.
So this is very clearly Epstein telling Wolf, for reasons that are not entirely clear,
that Trump had full awareness of what Epstein was doing and the fact, apparently the fact that he
and his associates were recruiting young women and perhaps girls from Mar-a-Lago into their sex trafficking operation.
Is Epstein basically saying here Trump is lying because I was never a member to begin with of Mar-a-Lago?
So therefore, if he says that he kicked me out, that's not true.
He's saying that, but to me the bigger sentence is, of course, he knew about the girls.
And obviously, Trump has denied having any knowledge of the sex trafficking operation.
And so this would appear to be a refutation of that argument.
Now, again, it's very important to remember that Epstein is a.
notorious liar and manipulator. And so we really just don't know if this is true, but it clearly
shows that Epstein is telling other people that Trump had knowledge about what was going on.
And again, it's not clear why he was telling this to Michael Wolf. We've obviously tried to
speak to Michael Wolf and everyone else who were writing about in these emails today. Wolf has
not responded to our requests today. Others have also not responded, and some have just declined
to comment. You mentioned Galane Maxwell, who is currently serving prison time for helping Epstein
with his sex trafficking operation.
And earlier this year, she told the Justice Department that she had never seen Donald Trump
in a, quote, inappropriate setting.
Does anything in these emails contradict that statement?
I'm not sure I would use the word contradict, but there's certainly some tension here.
I mean, in the 2011 email that Epstein sent to Maxwell, so he refers to an unknown victim
as having spent hours at my house, meaning Epstein's house, with Trump.
And Maxwell responds to that, I have been thinking about that.
And that certainly implies that Maxwell knew about something that was going on with Trump.
There are potentially some, I guess, plausible explanations in which that does not contradict what she said this summer to the Justice Department.
But there's certainly on their face does seem to be some tension.
Okay, so you've just walked us through the three emails released by Democrats.
What happened next?
What happened next is that the Republicans on the House Oversight Committee released by our best count more than 20,000 pages of emails from Jeffrey Epstein's Gmail account where, frankly, I would say we're maybe a third or a quarter of the way through going through all these emails.
So I don't not know what the totality of it is going to show.
But so far, the main takeaway is that it's really clear that for years after Trump severed his ties with Epstein.
Epstein was still really focused on Trump.
And it seemed like for at least two reasons.
One is that he was trying to hurt Donald Trump.
He was disparaging his businesses.
He was disparaging Trump's character.
But secondly, especially in later years, Epstein appeared to think that he had some potential
leverage over Trump at a time when the federal government, which was run by Donald Trump,
was criminally investigating Epstein.
And so we see emails.
where Epstein is calling Trump a dope and demented.
But we also see emails where he is urging his lawyer or his financial advisor to dig into Trump's finances.
We know from other reporting that Epstein was constantly trying to portray himself as having access to people that maybe he didn't actually have access to or he wasn't as close with as he portrayed.
And it seems here in all these emails that we've seen so far that he's trying to leverage the perception.
of his proximity to Donald Trump, right?
And I just wonder, based on what we know about how transactional Epstein was,
how much stock should we put into the way that Epstein is portraying his relationship to Donald Trump?
Well, I don't think anyone should ever put much stock into what Jeffrey Epstein says or writes.
He is a complete liar with a really clear pattern of manipulating people for his own gain
and exaggerating his connections to powerful people.
That said, we have, through our reporting and other news organizations reporting, we've clearly established over and over again that Trump and Epstein were quite close for a period of time.
But to me, the takeaway of these emails is not so much what they reveal about Epstein's relationship with Trump, as much as they reveal that Epstein, who is always an opportunist and always looking for an edge over people, was doing that here with Trump.
He could sense, I think, that the walls were closing in on him and that his life, his freedom were on the line.
And he was desperate to find any edge, any advantage he could grab.
And one of those edges was Trump.
It was this long ago relationship, but it's still, in Epstein's eyes, had value to him as he tried to evade the criminal justice system.
David, thank you so much.
Thank you, Rachel.
After the break, I talked to our colleague Michael Gold
about the fight on Capitol Hill over the Epstein files
and the push to release even more documents.
We'll be right back.
Michael Gold, thank you so much for joining us from what looks like a phone booth on Capitol Hill.
Is that where you are?
Yes, I'm in a phone booth, basically.
It's a closet, more or less.
Well, thank you for finding a quiet space for us.
We wanted to talk to you after we've just talked to David Enrich about what we learned from these more than 20,000 pages worth of emails from Jeffrey Epstein.
And I want to ask you, somebody who's been covering the saga from Capitol Hill, to explain to us why these emails have been related.
and where exactly we are in the long journey of trying to get all of the Epstein files released?
So the story here on Capitol Hill actually begins months ago in July. And at the time, a lot of lawmakers here were very unhappy that the Trump administration had backtracked in their view on a promise to release the files. And so two lawmakers, a representative, Rokana, a Democrat from California, and Thomas Massey, a Republican from Kentucky,
decide that they're going to introduce a bill that would force the Justice Department to release
the Epstein files. At the same time, there's a lot of skepticism that this bill will actually
ever come to a vote. And so Democrats on the House Oversight Committee use the committee
to begin forcing subpoenas on the Epstein investigation. And it eventually expands to include
Republicans who want to see additional subpoenas and are interested in getting more information
released. So you have a bill that would force the Justice Department to release the files
and an investigation coming out of the Oversight Committee
that's a larger investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, Galane Maxwell,
and how the Trump administration handled the case.
So just to be clear, there are two parallel efforts going on here.
One is to get the DOJ to release the files,
and the other one is from this House Oversight Committee
to get more information about Jeffrey Epstein
and his relationship to these powerful figures,
including President Donald Trump.
That's right.
And one telling detail, I think, about this whole saga
that gets us to today,
is that Speaker Mike Johnson does not want to support this bill.
He opposes a bill that would force a Trump administration to do anything on the Epstein files.
But as he is opposing the bill, he points to this investigation the Oversight Committee is doing frequently and says, well, this is the avenue that we need to take if we want to get full transparency here.
Okay, so the read on this is basically that Johnson is supportive of the House Oversight Committee's efforts, but not supportive of the efforts to force the DOJ to turn over other documents, right?
That's right. And so because the White House and Republican leadership are opposed to this bipartisan bill, Thomas Massey and Rocana file what's known as a discharge petition. And the shorthand for a discharge petition is that if 218 members of the House, which is a majority of the body, agree on any one particular issue, they can force the House to vote on a bill. And so Speaker Johnson essentially says we don't need to do this. We don't need to force a vote that would circumvent leadership. We can look at the Oversight Committee and their investigation.
and they'll do the work for us.
And what ends up happening is the Oversight Committee gets all of these documents from Jeffrey
Epstein's estate, and it's the information in those materials that they end up releasing today.
So let's just pause for a second.
The Democrats released three emails first before the trove of 20,000.
So why did they choose to take that step?
So if you ask them, they'll tell you that they got these particular documents a few days ago.
It took them time to go through and redact information.
and decide that these needed to come out today.
That's the stated reason.
But I think there's also political dynamics at play,
as there often are here on Capitol Hill.
Today is the day that the House is voting
to end the government shutdown.
And House Democrats are really unhappy
with the deal that the Senate made.
They think it makes them look weak,
that they didn't get what they wanted.
And the release of these emails,
intentionally or not,
has changed and shifted the conversation on Capitol Hill
so that the Epstein saga has become the focus again.
But it's very clear that Republicans
President Trump and the White House all want to be talking about the fact that Republicans ended the shutdown without Democrats having to make major concessions.
And instead, a significant amount of their time today has been spent talking about Jeffrey Epstein and his relationship with President Trump.
So if Republicans had an incentive to keep the focus on the end of the shutdown, why did they then release 20,000-plus files on Jeffrey Epstein?
So earlier this morning, House Republicans and the White House argue that Democrats were cherry-picking documents.
and selectively choosing documents from this trove
in order to present a specific narrative.
And so they released 20,000 documents from the Epstein estate
to make the point that there's way more in the files
than just these three emails.
Throughout their investigation, House Republicans
have been making the case that their Epstein investigation
is not just about Trump,
but about a host of political elites and powerful figures,
including President Clinton, who they've repeatedly focused on.
But as we just learned from David Enrich,
the 20,000 documents did have a lot in there about President Trump and basically just
like reinforce the idea that Epstein was fixated on Trump in many ways and raised a lot of
questions about the relationship between these two men. So if the intent was for Republicans
to detract attention away from the singular relationship between Trump and Epstein,
it does not seem like that, at least today, had that desired effect.
That's right. And I think it was always going to be hard to change the focus away from
Epstein's relationship with the president, because if you remember how we got here in the first place
is that the Justice Department, after promising to release these files and insisting that they would
release these files, decided not to. And so there were always questions about Trump's relationship
with Epstein and what might have been in the files. But there was a sense in which today was always
going to be about Epstein in some way anyway. How so? So seven weeks ago, an Arizona Democrat named
Adelaide Togne won a special election to fill a seat that was left vacant after her father died in
office. And during her campaign, Grijalva said that as soon as she got to Capitol Hill,
one of the first things she would do is sign on to this discharge petition. And that is the thing
that you mentioned earlier, where if enough people sign on, they can force a vote that bypasses
the speaker on whether or not to release the Epstein files, correct? That's right. When Grijalva won,
it looked like this petition might finally succeed. The problem was that when Grijalva won her
election the House was in recess, and Speaker Mike Johnson refused to seat her until the recess
was over, which would not happen until there was a deal to end the shutdown.
So obviously, Wednesday was the day that she was going to be seated. The shutdown was
finally ending. What happens next? So Speaker Johnson says that he'll swear Adelita Grijalva in
at 4 p.m. on Wednesday. And that sets a deadline. At this point, the discharge petition has 217 signatures.
Grahava would be the 218th. Of the people on the petition, four of them are Republicans. That's
Thomas Massey, and three Republican women, Nancy Mace, Lauren Bobert, and Marjorie Taylor Green.
Essentially, this 4 p.m. deadline kicks off a last-minute pressure campaign by the White House,
who had been lobbying these Republicans for months to pull their names from the petition.
But this doesn't work. They all say they're going to stay on the petition.
And at 4 p.m. today, Adelaide Grijalva gets sworn in, and the first thing she does after she finishes
is signs this petition. So what happens next? How quickly might we actually see the DOJ documents?
So that's one of the interesting things about this effort here.
You know, theoretically, we could see a vote on the House floor sometime in December.
It could be earlier depending on how the Speaker decides to maneuver here.
But even if this bill comes to House floor and passes in a vote, which it probably will,
because it already has the support of the majority of the House, the legislation would still
have to go to the Senate, which might not even ever have to take it up.
And if it were to somehow get passed by the Senate, then it would get sent to the
president, who it seems very clear from his public remarks, would probably veto this and send it back
to Congress. So what you're saying is basically this could die in the Senate, but even if it didn't
die in the Senate, even if it got to the president's desk, what would the point of that be? He's not
going to push this through. Yeah, it's a great question. And I think one of the outstanding things that
a lot of people here are wondering is why the White House whipped so hard against this once it became
obvious that this effort would succeed. I think a lot of this is about politics. It's embarrassing to
the White House to have members of the president's own party, vote for a bill that essentially
rebukes his administration and tries to compel them to do something that they insisted they
wouldn't do. And because so many on the right have been clamoring for the release of the Epstein
files, there was always a sense that if this actually ever came to the floor, it would not be
just a simple majority vote, but that a lot of Republicans would feel like they had no choice
but to support it to keep their base happy. And that is a difficult position, both for Republicans
and for the president to be in
because it makes it look
like the president is losing favor
with members of his own party.
Obviously, there is a long history
of Republicans who go against President Trump
getting defenestrated from Washington.
But Republicans also just lost a bunch of elections last week.
The president's approval is very low.
Lawmakers are very aware
that Jeffrey Epstein is an issue
that has divided the MAGA movement
in President Trump supporters.
And it's an issue where,
many of Trump supporters want a lot of transparency. So wouldn't you expect to see more Republicans
voting to release these documents? I think we will see more Republicans than the four who have
already signed on to this effort vote to release these documents. You're right to say that lawmakers,
especially Republicans on Capitol Hill, are often worried about invoking the wrath of the president,
especially as we head into midterm elections and as we head into primary season. But I think
there's a different and important political calculation here. On the one hand, there's voting with
the president and voting against the president. But on the other hand, Republicans don't want to be
seen as recording a vote that would shield Jeffrey Epstein from further transparency.
But the Epstein story just hasn't gone away, has it? It is a story that has dogged President
Trump. And just to step back for a minute, I kind of wonder why you think that is. Why is this
a story that just won't go away? The story of Jeffrey Epstein is one that probably,
a lot of questions about the kind of things
that President Trump has put at the heart of his campaign,
about whether there is a powerful group of elites
whose interests are perceived as being more important
than the interests of the people.
Trump ran on a campaign of ending the deep state,
of draining the swamp, but now he's in charge
and he's the one who appears to be shielding these files
and keeping them out of view of the American people.
I think it's an example of a time
when President Trump has tapped into these cultural forces,
But now that he's in the highest office of the land, they are turning in a direction that he didn't expect.
Michael, just to step back for a second and talk about the larger context this is all happening in, it feels as though the lesson over and over again in recent elections has been that the electorate, the American people, care about affordability.
They care about the cost of living.
They care about health care.
We saw Democrats win big up and down the ballot recently, also about affordability in many respects.
President Trump won the most recent presidential elections in large part because people cared about the economy more than any other issues that the Democrats were pressing.
So it feels really remarkable that after all of this, Democrats are focusing on Jeffrey Epstein.
So what do you make of that?
I think for Democrats, they are connected.
this issue to affordability.
You know, they've been saying for a while
that President Trump and Republicans
are protecting the interests of elites of billionaires
and that they're not looking out for the regular people.
And they see the obscene issue as part of that
as another case of President Trump protecting billionaires
rather than providing transparency that people really want.
But the other thing here is that this issue
is one of the first times that Democrats have successfully
been able to split Republicans
and to divide some of them from President Trump.
And so even though they just had these big wins in New Jersey and Virginia and New York
that many attributed to a message of affordability,
this is a case where they can't resist an opportunity to poke at the Republican Party,
make them look weak, and put them on the defense.
Michael Gold, thank you so much.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
The House gave final passage to a spending package to reopen the government,
triggering the end to the longest running shutdown in the nation's history.
The vote came on day 43 of the shutdown
and days after eight Democratic senators broke their own party's blockade
and joined Republicans in allowing the spending measure to move forward.
It was the first time the House had held a vote in nearly two months.
And the American Penny died on Wednesday.
It was 232 years old.
The cause was irrelevance and expensiveness.
the Treasury Department said.
Nothing could be bought anymore with a penny, not even penny candy,
and the cost to mint the penny had risen to more than three cents.
The final pennies were minted on Wednesday afternoon in Philadelphia.
Today's episode was produced by Rob Zipko, Alex Stern, and Rochelle Bonja.
It was edited by Paige Cowett and Lexi DiLow.
It contains music by Dan Powell and Marion Lazzano,
and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
That's it for the daily.
I'm Rachel Abrams.
See you tomorrow.
