Disturbing new allegations have emerged regarding Jeffrey Epstein's secluded New Mexico ranch, with claims that men were gang raped and women were killed during rough sex games at the property. The revelations were featured in a recent 60 Minutes Australia documentary, which included interviews with survivors and investigators.
Allegations of Buried Bodies and Fetish Sex
Congresswoman Melanie Stansbury, a Democrat who has reviewed Epstein files and is leading efforts for justice, revealed that the FBI received a tip from a Zorro Ranch staffer in 2019. The tip claimed that two foreign girls were buried on the estate after dying by strangulation during rough, fetish sex, allegedly on Epstein's orders.
Stansbury further alleged that men were drugged and raped at the ranch. She told the documentary that a man described being brought to the ranch, drugged, and witnessing multiple young men being raped in front of him. She characterized Epstein as a serial abuser and super predator.
Survivor Accounts of Abuse
Chauntae Davies, who says she was abused across multiple Epstein properties from 2001 to 2005, described Zorro Ranch as the scariest. She recalled waiting in her bedroom like a mouse in a trap for someone to announce Epstein wanted a massage, which she said was code for rape. Davies also alleged hearing stories of doctors performing undisclosed medical procedures on victims at the ranch, including girls waking up in dark rooms with female doctors standing over them.
Davies further suggested Epstein sought to create a perfect gene pool, recalling overheard conversations about a baby being born for that purpose. A 2018 email between Epstein and Bitcoin developer Bryan Bishop, presented in the documentary, discussed funding for a designer-baby and human cloning project, though no evidence indicates it moved forward.
Investigation Underway
Stansbury contacted the New Mexico Attorney General after learning of the tip about the two girls. Investigators are now conducting a full investigation of the 7,500-acre property, including imaging the entire area and analyzing the data. Handwritten letters, documents, and books have been found at the ranch.
The state attorney general's office announced last month that searches had begun with cooperation from current owners. The investigation was reopened in February after a previous closure in 2019 at federal prosecutors' request. State prosecutors stated that revelations in sealed FBI files warranted further examination.
Justice Elusive?
Despite the investigation, Davies expressed doubt that full justice would ever be achieved, citing efforts to cover up the truth. However, Stansbury said the state justice department is deeply committed to turning the Epstein files into trials. Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal charges of sex trafficking and abuse of underage girls. He never faced charges in New Mexico, but the state had interviewed possible victims earlier.



