“I'll teach you how little girls should behave.” Trump in trouble. Disturbing documents have been released

The US Department of Justice has published FBI documents containing allegations of sexual assault allegedly committed by Donald Trump.
According to FBI summaries of the interrogations, known as FBI 302, the woman's main allegation is that Trump hit her after she bit his penis while he was trying to force her to perform oral sex.
The disturbing documents emerge as Democrats investigate whether the U.S. Department of Justice intentionally withheld the material. Dark clouds are gathering over the US president and the Republican Party.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called the allegations “completely baseless accusations, supported by incredible evidence, coming from a sadly unstable woman with an extensive criminal history.”
“The complete baselessness of these accusations is also supported by the clear fact that Joe Biden's Justice Department has known about them for four years and taken no action — because they knew President Trump had done absolutely nothing wrong,” Leavitt said.
In the files, dating from August to October 2019, the woman, whose name has been withheld, claims that when she was between 13 and 15 years old, Epstein took her to New York or New Jersey, where “in a very tall building with huge rooms” he introduced her to Trump.
Trump, she claims, “didn't like that I was a boy-girl,” which the hearing notes interpreted as tomboyish.
The US president is in trouble
The woman claimed that other people were present, but she did not remember who they were. Trump asked them to leave the room and then, according to interrogation notes, said “something like, 'I'm going to teach you how little girls should behave.'”
Trump then allegedly unzipped his pants and put the teenager's head “on his penis,” the woman said. She said she “bit him with all her strength.” In response, she claims, he pulled her hair and hit her on the side of the head.
In one of the interviews, the woman revealed that she had started cooperation with lawyers and “wanted to be honest” about the “ongoing civil case in case the agents [FBI] stated that there may be a conflict of interest.
The woman said that she and people around her received a series of threatening phone calls. She also received a message left on a co-worker's phone, but intended for her. She told the FBI she believed the calls were related to Epstein.
“She whispered that if it wasn't Epstein, maybe it was 'the other one,'” the interrogation notes say. When agents pressed her to clarify who she was referring to, she said it was Trump.
In the final interview, agents asked her again about the allegations about Trump, noting in the document that he was “the current president of the United States.” The woman asked “what is the point of sharing this information at this stage in her life if there is a high probability that nothing can be done about it.”
Trump has faced accusations of sexual assault and sexual misconduct before, including from multiple women who spoke out about it during the 2016 presidential campaign.
In 2023, a federal jury found Trump guilty of sexually harassing and defaming writer E. Jean Carroll. She claims that Trump raped her in a Manhattan department store in the 1990s and then denied her account of the rape, calling her a liar. Trump asked the US Supreme Court to overturn the judgment that sentenced him to pay $5 million. (approx. PLN 18.5 million) compensation to Carroll.

E.Jean CarrolManny Carabel/Stringer/Getty Images
“Over the past several weeks, Democrats on the Oversight Committee have been examining the FBI's handling of 2019 allegations of sexual assault of a minor that were made against President Donald Trump by the victim,” Robert Garcia, a Democrat on the committee, said last week.
“Democrats on the Oversight Committee can confirm that the Department of Justice likely illegally concealed FBI interviews with a victim who accused President Trump of heinous crimes,” he added.
In response to the statement, the U.S. Department of Justice published a social media post saying Democrats on the oversight committee “should stop misleading the public by causing outrage among their radical anti-Trump supporters.”
“NOTHING was removed,” the US Department of Justice said.
“If files are temporarily withdrawn to remove victim data or personally identifiable information, those documents are immediately restored online and publicly available,” the post continued. “ALL documents relevant to the case have been released, except for documents that fall into one of the following categories: duplicates, documents covered by professional privilege, or documents related to an ongoing federal investigation.”
In addition to accusations of withholding some documents, the US Department of Justice has also come under fire from lawmakers for improperly disclosing victims' names and redacting the names of some people.
On Wednesday, March 4, a House committee voted to subpoena Attorney General Pam Bondi to testify about her handling of the Epstein files.




