Epstein’s sinister note to sex predator Larry Nassar days before his suicide: ‘Our president also shares our love of young, nubile girls’

Jeffrey Epstein claimed that “our president” loved “young, attractive girls” in a chilling 2019 postcard he wrote to serial child molester Larry Nassar just days before his suicide.
Although his name was not explicitly mentioned in the memo, Donald Trump was serving his first term in the White House at the time.
A newly released Epstein dossier from the Department of Justice has revealed one of the disgraced financier’s last correspondences before he was found dead in his cell at New York’s Metropolitan Correctional Center on August 10, 2019.
The letter was mailed days after Epstein’s death to Nassar, the former U.S. Olympic doctor responsible for the biggest sexual abuse scandal in American sports history.
“As you know by now, I took a ‘shortcut’ home,” Epstein wrote in a handwritten note.
He continued: ‘Good luck! We shared something. . . Our love and care for young ladies in the hope that they will reach their full potential.
‘Our president shares our love for young and attractive girls. He liked to “grab” a young beauty when she passed him, whereas we found him grabbing food in the system’s cafeterias. Life isn’t fair.’
The postcard was signed ‘Sincerely, J. Epstein’ and read ‘LN’, Nassar’s initials.
Trump has not been charged with misconduct in the Epstein child sex trafficking scandal.
Newly released Epstein files from the Justice Department reveal the disgraced financier’s final correspondence before he was found dead in his cell
Pictured from left to right: Donald Trump, Melania Trump, Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell in 2000
Larry Nassar is a former US Olympic doctor who was convicted of sexual assault in 2017.
The Daily Mail has contacted the White House for comment on the postcard, which was published last night without further context.
Nassar pleaded guilty to obtaining and possessing child pornography and destroying evidence and was sentenced to 60 years in prison in December 2017.
The convicted sex offender abused nearly 300 athletes under the guise of medical care.
Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles and McKayla Maroney were among his many young victims.
“He abused my trust, abused my body, and left scars on my soul that will never go away,” Maroney wrote in a heartbreaking victim impact statement read aloud in court during Nassar’s trial.
Although the letter was shared with the public for the first time after the Department of Justice comprehensively disclosed evidence related to Epstein, the Associated Press reported its existence in 2023.
According to the press, the letter that Epstein wrote to Nassar, postmarked on August 13, 2019, was found weeks later in the mailroom of a New York prison, returned to its sender.
“Apparently he sent it in the mail and it was sent back to him,” the investigator who found the postcard told a prison official at the time, according to the AP.
‘I’m not sure if I should open it or give it to someone?’
Trump has repeatedly denied accusations that he was involved in Epstein’s criminal activities.
Epstein committed suicide in prison in August 2019, days before his letter to Nassar was mailed
Trump not charged with any crime in Epstein child sex trafficking scandal
But ample evidence claims Trump flew ‘far more times than previously reported’ on pedophile’s private jet; This includes a trip with a 20-year-old woman.
Among nearly 8,000 new documents The email from a New York assistant U.S. attorney states that Trump was listed as a passenger on eight flights between 1993 and 1996.
Epstein’s accomplice on at least four of these trips Ghislaine Maxwell was also available.
The email reads: ‘For your situational awareness, we would like to point out that the flight logs we received yesterday reflect that Donald Trump traveled significantly more on Epstein’s private jet than previously reported (or that we knew); this includes the period during which we expect to receive compensation in the Maxwell case.
‘On a 1993 flight, he and Epstein were the only two passengers listed; in the other, only three passengers were Epstein, Trump and a then-20-year-old boy. [redacted].’
On Friday, the deadline originally set to get the government to share the Epstein files, the Justice Department released nearly 300,000 documents.
Congress voted to share the files with the public. Trump, who initially opposed the release, signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act on November 19 and gave the Justice Department a 30-day timeline for release.
Olympic athletes McKayla Maroney (left) and Simone Biles (right) were two of Nassar’s victims
Justice Department releases hundreds of thousands of files of investigative evidence from Epstein’s estate
But senior officials at Trump’s Justice Department admit they failed to meet the deadline and hundreds of thousands of documents remain.
Epstein survivors and lawmakers on both sides of the political aisle call Trump administration processing of files.
Skeptics also noted how heavily redacted and lacking context the evidence was.




