Back in 1992, Jeffrey Epstein was exploring the purchase of a ranch in New Mexico—what locals later came to call his “baby ranch”—when a real estate agent, Pat French, spotted him arriving at a luxury hotel suite accompanied by a group of young girls “a little bit older” than her pre-teen daughter. French assumed they were his daughters or friends, but later learned Epstein had no children. The girls were present when French delivered property papers describing remote, isolated properties Epstein was interested in. Shortly after, Epstein bought the 10,000-acre Zorro Ranch, from connections with powerful political figures, began building a massive hacienda, flew in expensive bed sheets and luxury food, and brought girls into region regularly; locals said he often arrived with “all these girls.”
What’s striking—and disturbing—is not just Epstein’s behavior but the extent to which people around him shrugged. None of the locals apparently reported concerns about seeing underage or young girls traveling with him, even after his reputation for abusing minors became public. Epstein’s political donations and local connections may have insulated him. The story suggests a pattern: powerful people, visible suspicious behavior, yet little accountability. It raises serious questions about communal blindness, the role of wealth in silencing scrutiny, and how earlier warnings got ignored until Epstein’s crimes became undeniable
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