“He Showed Me the Photos Himself,” Michael Wolff Says of Epstein’s Pictures of Trump With Topless Girls

“He Showed Me the Photos Himself,” Michael Wolff Says of Epstein’s Pictures of Trump With Topless Girls

Author Michael Wolff has made a startling revelation, claiming that Jeffrey Epstein once pulled out photos from his safe showing Donald Trump with topless young women sitting on his lap. Wolff shared the account during a Thursday episode of Inside Trump’s Head, reigniting controversy surrounding Trump’s long association with Epstein.

The alleged photos have resurfaced as a topic of heated discussion after Attorney General Pam Bondi avoided direct answers during a Senate hearing when questioned by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse about whether the FBI discovered such images during searches of Epstein’s estate.

Wolff, who said Epstein once asked him to write a biography, described how the disgraced financier displayed the explicit photos on his dining table nearly a decade ago.

“I am one of the people who has seen these pictures,” Wolff told host Joanna Coles. “And these are pictures that Jeffrey Epstein would take out of his safe and kind of display on his dining room table almost as you would playing cards. This amused him to have these pictures.”

According to Wolff, Epstein briefly stepped out of the room during a discussion about Trump, only to return carrying a stack of Polaroid-style snapshots. “There were specifically three that I remember—and this is now almost 10 years ago—but the three that I remember are two in which topless young women, and I don’t know the ages of these women, but they are young, are sitting in Trump’s lap. And this is outside Jeffrey Epstein’s house in Palm Beach, around the swimming pool,” he said.

“In the third picture, he’s wearing light pants and there’s a stain on the front of his trousers,” Wolff added. “And the girls—three, four, four or five as I remember—are pointing at the stain and laughing. And that is what I remember.”

Wolff claimed he once advised Epstein to release the photos after Trump became president. “And he said, ‘I can’t now. I may be such and such, but I’m not crazy,’ implying that he had some reason to fear the wrath of Donald Trump,” Wolff said.

In response to the allegations, White House Communications Director Steven Cheung dismissed Wolff’s credibility, offering his usual fiery defense. “Michael Wolff is a lying sack of s–t and has been proven to be a fraud. He routinely fabricates stories originating from his sick and warped imagination, only possible because he has a severe and debilitating case of Trump Derangement Syndrome that has rotted his peanut-sized brain,” Cheung told the Daily Beast.

“He Showed Me the Photos Himself,” Michael Wolff Says of Epstein’s Pictures of Trump With Topless Girls

Meanwhile, Attorney General Pam Bondi faced intense scrutiny in Washington this week during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing. Lawmakers grilled her over concerns about Trump’s influence on the Justice Department, with Whitehouse directly questioning her about the rumored Epstein photos.

Rather than confirm or deny the FBI’s findings, Bondi launched a counterattack against Whitehouse. “You know, Senator Whitehouse, you sit here and make salacious remarks, once again trying to slander President Trump left and right when you’re the one who was taking money from one of Epstein’s closest confidants,” she said, before falsely accusing him of taking donations from LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman.

Hoffman, a Democratic donor, admitted to meeting Epstein several times even after the financier’s 2008 conviction, later expressing regret about those interactions.

Whitehouse, however, denied Bondi’s claims. “This isn’t the ‘gotcha’ moment the AG was hoping for. Campaign donations are public records — I haven’t received a single contribution from the person AG Bondi names here. (Some fact-checker!),” he said afterward.

The heated exchange underscores how Epstein’s shadow continues to loom over Washington politics — especially as new testimonies and revelations reignite questions about who knew what, and when.

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