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The Women Who Enabled Jeffrey Epstein (Part 2)

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Lesley Groff, Adriana Ross, Nadia Marcinkova, and Sarah Kellen Vickers were not passive bystanders in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking operation—they were the backbone of it. Each played a specific role in maintaining the machinery of abuse, whether it was scheduling underage girls, managing the logistics of flights, or actively participating in grooming and coercion. Sarah Kellen Vickers, in particular, has been accused by multiple victims of coordinating the daily abuse pipeline, keeping detailed logs, and even instructing girls on how to please Epstein. Lesley Groff acted as a gatekeeper, helping to organize Epstein’s schedule and ensure a steady flow of young girls, shielding him from scrutiny while enabling criminality with precision and efficiency. These women weren't just secretaries or assistants—they were fully operational cogs in a predatory system.

Adriana Ross and Nadia Marcinkova both did more than stand silently by—they allegedly participated in acts of abuse themselves. Ross reportedly helped remove computers and other sensitive materials from Epstein’s Florida residence when police closed in, while Marcinkova, who was reportedly described as Epstein’s “sex slave” and protégé, has also been accused by victims of both being abused and later becoming a perpetrator herself. These women have largely evaded justice, hiding behind settlements, non-prosecution agreements, or silence, while survivors continue to live with the trauma they helped inflict. Their refusal to publicly acknowledge or account for their roles speaks volumes. The justice system's failure to hold them criminally accountable is a stain that still reeks of preferential treatment for those who enable powerful men.



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Source:

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/05/14/jeffrey-epstein-investigation-women-487157

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