A second set of court documents connected to sexual criminal Jeffrey Epstein describes the recruitment of several dozen girls at his mansion on the beachfront.
Thirty women had spoken to a Florida investigator about "performing massage and work" there, according to his evidence. Some received payment to invite their pals.
A judge ordered the court files to be made public, according to BBC.
They are a part of a case filed against Epstein's ex-girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, who is incarcerated.
A large portion of the information in this batch and the 900 pages that were disclosed on Wednesday was already discovered during her trial; she was imprisoned in 2022 for trafficking minors for Epstein.
A deposition taken in 2016 by Palm Beach, Florida police investigator Joseph Recarey revealed that he had spoken with roughly thirty women about "performing massage and work at Epstein's home" in the beachside enclave.
He said Maxwell was involved in recruiting the girls.
Recarey testified that only two of the girls had any massage experience and the majority of them were under the age of 18.
When asked how Epstein was able to gain access to so many underage girls the detective said: "Each of the victims that went to the home were asked to bring their friends to the home."
There are references to former US President Bill Clinton and Prince Andrew of the United Kingdom in the court records that were disclosed on Wednesday and Thursday.
One of the many allegations previously covered said that Prince Andrew molested a youngster in London, New York, and on Epstein's island in the Virgin Islands, all while the teenager was under Maxwell's orders to do so.
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