Epstein Victim's Diary Reveals Baby Snatched Minutes After Birth in 'Superior Gene Pool' Scheme
Epstein Victim's Diary Reveals Baby Snatched After Birth

Disturbing new revelations have emerged from the latest tranche of documents released by the US Department of Justice, detailing the alleged systematic abuse orchestrated by convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein. Among the three million pages of evidence, a harrowing diary entry from one of Epstein's victims describes how her newborn baby was taken from her just ten minutes after birth, as part of what she claims was Epstein's twisted ambition to create a "superior gene pool."

Victim's Diary Details Birth and Immediate Separation

The diary entry, believed to be from around 2002, was written by a woman who was approximately 16 or 17 years old at the time. She alleges she gave birth to a baby girl, but experienced only fleeting moments with her child before the infant was removed. "I saw between her fingers this tiny head and body in the doctors hands. It reached its tiny arm up and had a tiny foot," the victim wrote, describing the traumatic delivery. She recounts hearing Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's convicted co-conspirator, comment in the hallway that the baby was beautiful, before the newborn's whimpers suddenly stopped.

Epstein's Eugenic Ambitions Compared to Nazi Ideology

The victim expresses profound discomfort with Epstein's stated goal of creating a "superior gene pool" through selective breeding, a concept she explicitly likens to Nazi ideology. "Why me? It makes no sense. Why my hair and eye colour?" she questioned in her diary. This aligns with previous reporting by The New York Times, which revealed in 2019 that Epstein had confided in scientists about a scheme to seed the human race with his DNA by impregnating women at his New Mexico ranch.

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Elaborating on this disturbing ambition, the woman wrote: "The piano and music comments are made to convince me this is right and will create perfect offspring ... I don't think it works that way and its making me hate playing together." She later described feeling like "nothing but your property and incubator," asserting: "There is no respect for me as a human."

Sarah Ferguson's Controversial Correspondence

In another startling revelation from the document release, an email from Sarah Ferguson, the former Duchess of York, congratulates Epstein on the birth of a "baby boy" following his release from jail in 2011. Dated September 21, 2011, the email reads: "Don't know if you're still on this bbm but have heard from The Duke that you have had a baby boy." Ferguson appears to reference her ex-husband, Prince Andrew, as the source of this information.

Despite Epstein's conviction for child sex offences, Ferguson offered him her "love, friendship and congratulations" in the correspondence, adding pointedly: "Even though you never kept in touch, I am still here with love, friendship and congratulations on your baby boy." This email raises further questions about the extent of Epstein's network and the potential existence of secret offspring.

Legal Actions and Ongoing Investigations

The victim's lawyers, Wigdor LLP, shared the diary with federal prosecutors investigating Epstein and Maxwell. The same woman later filed a lawsuit in 2023 under the pseudonym Jane Doe against Leon Black, former chief executive of Apollo Global Management and one of Epstein's associates. She alleges that Black raped her at Epstein's house in an assault that caused her to bleed. Black has denied these allegations, and the case remains ongoing.

Evidence of Systematic Breeding Plans

The newly released files contain compelling evidence suggesting Epstein's eugenic ambitions were more than mere fantasy. One undated video appears to show a DNA paternity test on a table at Epstein's seven-storey New York mansion. Email correspondences between Epstein and Maxwell, some of which were previously leaked to Bloomberg, reveal detailed discussions about fertility treatments.

In an email from October 2005, just days after police raided Epstein's Palm Beach home with a search warrant, Maxwell sent Epstein detailed instructions on sperm donation for a shared fertility treatment. "You can do the sample at home," she wrote, adding that it "has to be within 90 mins of my procedure" and that "all the ejaculate must be collected." Another email from 2007, sent just before Epstein signed a non-prosecution agreement with federal prosecutors, contains further instructions about fertility procedures.

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Epstein's Transhumanist Fantasies

Sources close to Epstein have disclosed how the financier surrounded himself with scientists and confided in them about his plan to develop a super-race of humans using his DNA. He would host dinner parties where academics mingled with attractive, college-educated women he saw as candidates to carry his offspring. Dozens of acquaintances, including one of Epstein's former defence attorneys, told The New York Times this was fueled by his fascination with eugenics.

Epstein's interests extended to transhumanism, the belief that the human race can further evolve through scientific advancements. He reportedly told one person that upon his death, "he wanted his head and penis to be frozen" and donated to charities supporting this ideology. According to his inbox, one of his last book purchases included a copy of 'The Formula: Unlocking the Secrets to Raising Highly Successful Children.'

Epstein apparently based his baby ranch concept on accounts of the Repository for Germinal Choice, a project intended to be stocked with sperm from Nobel laureates to enhance the human gene pool. Only one Nobel Prize winner has admitted to contributing sperm to this repository, which discontinued operations in 1999.

The publication of these documents comes six weeks after a December 19 deadline mandated by the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which passed Congress and was signed into law in November. While Epstein's will, drawn up before his 2019 death in a New York prison cell, did not mention any offspring, these latest revelations suggest the disgraced financier may have pursued his eugenic ambitions with disturbing determination.