Megyn Kelly says the world will hear 'directly' from the late Jeffrey Epstein following the recent release of a trove of court documents related to the convicted pedophile's abusive sex regime suggested.
“My relationship with Jeffrey Epstein is not over. I can tell you that for a fact,” Kelly said on Thursday's episode of SiriusXM's podcast “The Megyn Kelly Show.”
“I can't tell you how, but we're going to hear a lot more about Jeffrey Epstein over the next year, and you might even hear from him directly. Because I'm allowed to tell you,'' Kelly added during the episode. mediaite.
The former Fox News prime-time personality also reacted to testimony from Epstein accusers contained in newly unsealed files, and court documents show that former President Bill Clinton once “referred to young girls and It was revealed that he said, “I like it.''
Mr Kelly said the revelation was “shocking but not surprising”.
“Like I said, we've been looking at this history of him for a long time,” she added.
It's unclear what soundbites the public was able to hear from Mr. Epstein before he committed suicide in a Manhattan federal prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.
Epstein's brother, Mark Epstein, told the Post earlier this week that he had never heard “direct words” from the late investor before.
“If I say what I know about both candidates, they're going to have to cancel the election.'' That's what Jeffrey told me in 2016, Epstein said. He spoke to the Post on Wednesday, recalling a conversation he had with his brother about the showdown between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.
But Mark, a 69-year-old real estate developer, demurred when asked to elaborate, saying his brother never revealed exactly what he knew about the then-presidential candidate.
Mr. Trump's name was included in about 1,000 pages of court documents that Manhattan federal judge Loretta Preska ordered released last month, and he has been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Mr. Epstein's sex-trafficking regime. There wasn't.
But old flight records from Epstein's famous Lolita Express jet, which have been publicly available since December 2021, show that Trump flew privately between 1993 and 1997, sometimes with his family. He has been shown to have traveled there at least seven times.
Trump and Epstein, then a real estate developer, were known to be pals at the time and were regularly seen together at official events.
But records do not show that the former commander-in-chief ever visited Mr. Epstein's island in the Caribbean, the epicenter of his sadistic plot.
Crown Prince Andrew, a disgraced known Epstein friend, was also named in the document along with more than 170 other Epstein associates, including an Epstein accuser who accused Andrew of sexual misconduct against her. He had previously been sued by Virginia Giuffre.
Epstein's former lawyer and friend Alan Dershowitz defended the late billionaire's associates, saying “no one knew about his secret private life.”
“We can conclude that they misjudged them, but we cannot conclude that the accusations against them are true without hearing the evidence,” the former Harvard Law School professor wrote in a statement. He spoke Tuesday ahead of the filing.





