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Democrats Drop Never-Before-Seen Epstein Island Photos—Including THAT Dentist Chair Surrounded by Masks

House Democrats release 2020 photos and videos of Epstein’s Little St. James, including dental chair surrounded by masks and blackboard listing “Power” and “Deception.”

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You’re alone on Little St. James. The trade winds have died. Salt air sticks to your skin as you push open a heavy door that should never have been opened again.

In the center of the room sits a gleaming dental chair, surrounded by ten blank male masks staring down from the walls like silent witnesses waiting for the next scream. Your pulse hammers in your throat. This is no ordinary office. This is where Jeffrey Epstein played god.

Masks of men’s faces surround a dentist’s chair.

House Oversight Democrats on Wednesday dumped chilling new images and videos of Epstein’s private island compound, spotlighting the infamous dentist chair ringed by those frozen faces and a blackboard scrawled with the words "Power," "Deception," "Intellectual," "Political," and "Music"—other words blacked out by congressional censors.

The haunting visuals, captured in 2020 by U.S. Virgin Islands authorities, surfaced the same day Ghislaine Maxwell’s lawyers begged a Manhattan federal judge to keep her 2008 Florida grand jury transcripts sealed, warning premature release would poison any chance of a fair retrial.

"Releasing the grand-jury materials from her case, which contain untested and unproven allegations, would create undue prejudice so severe that it would foreclose the possibility of a fair retrial should Ms. Maxwell’s habeas petition succeed," attorneys David Markus and Melissa Madrigal wrote.

Maxwell, serving 20 years for recruiting and grooming underage girls for Epstein, has exhausted direct appeals but plans a pro se habeas petition.

The images—ten still photos and four short videos—show barren guest bedrooms, a sun-bleached pool, a helipad, and that macabre dental suite.

One frame captures a "No Trespassing" sign abandoned on the beach like a bad joke.

The release ramps up pressure on President Trump, who signed the Epstein Transparency Act on Nov. 19, mandating full file disclosure by Dec. 19.

The deadline is now 16 days away—and nothing has been released.

"These new images are a disturbing look into the world of Jeffrey Epstein and his island," said Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.). "We are releasing these photos and videos to ensure public transparency in our investigation and to help piece together the full picture of Epstein’s horrific crimes. We won’t stop fighting until we deliver justice for the survivors. It’s time for President Trump to release all the files, now."

You close the laptop. The masks are still staring. Somewhere in the dark, the chair is still waiting.

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