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Epstein's Zorro ranch near Santa Fe is under renewed scrutiny.
Summary
Newly released Department of Justice files include photographs and records related to Jeffrey Epstein's Zorro ranch near Santa Fe and show federal prosecutors told New Mexico officials they had not searched the property around his 2019 arrest; New Mexico lawmakers are pursuing a proposed bipartisan truth commission.
Content
Newly released Department of Justice documents include photographs and records related to Jeffrey Epstein's nearly 10,000‑acre Zorro ranch outside Santa Fe. Survivors and court testimony have alleged that abuse occurred at the ranch, and the files contain images and other material that have renewed public interest. Federal prosecutors in 2019 told New Mexico officials they had not searched the property and asked the state to pause its investigation; state authorities say there is no active local criminal probe at this time. New Mexico legislators have proposed a bipartisan truth commission to examine what officials knew and how events were handled.
Key details:
- The DOJ release includes photos and records from the Zorro ranch, with some images showing young women whose faces are redacted.
- Multiple survivors have testified or filed accounts saying they were abused at the ranch in New Mexico.
- In 2019 Manhattan federal prosecutors communicated that they had not searched the New Mexico property and asked state investigators to hold further action.
- New Mexico lawmakers have proposed a bipartisan truth commission that could be considered by the state house soon.
Summary:
The documents have focused attention on the ranch and on how federal and state authorities interacted around the 2019 case. Undetermined at this time is whether additional criminal investigations will proceed; the proposed bipartisan truth commission could be voted on by the state house as early as next week.
