“May Every Day Be Another Wonderful Secret,” Donald Trump Once Wished
Deep inside the story describing the letter hinting about sexual secrets that Trump wrote Jeffrey Epstein in 2003 — 26 paragraphs in — WSJ includes a seeming no comment from Ghislaine Maxwell.
Maxwell, a British socialite, was convicted in 2021 of helping Epstein’s sex-trafficking and sentenced to 20 years in prison. Maxwell didn’t respond to a letter requesting an interview sent to her in prison. Arthur Aidala, an attorney who represented Maxwell, said, “At this point, she is focused on her case before the Supreme Court of the United States.”
The reporters either had time to write Maxwell a posted letter or they are among the contacts Maxwell has listed to contact her via the prison email system (in any case, Trump would have no compunctions about tracking her communications in prison). Whichever means they used to contact her, they got got no response.
They also asked Arthur Aidala, who represented Maxwell — past tense — for comment. His response wasn’t so much a no comment, but was, instead, a claim that Maxwell is focused on her Supreme Court appeal — the appeal which she delayed until Trump was inaugurated, the appeal response to which John Sauer twice delayed, first from May until June, then from June until July, before finally submitting the response last Monday, July 14, just one day before WSJ interviewed Trump about the story. Aidala is not the attorney on that appeal; David Markus and Sara Kropf are the listed attorneys on her SCOTUS appeal. In fact, after Sauer submitted the response — indicating Trump’s DOJ would defend the prosecution after twice leaving open the possibility it might not — Markus told ABC that Trump probably didn’t know that Sauer — Trump’s one-time defense attorney — had done that, because Trump is the ultimate dealmaker.
In a statement Monday, an attorney for Maxwell hinted at the swirling controversy surrounding the Trump administration’s decision not to release any further records related to investigations of Epstein.
“I’d be surprised if President Trump knew his lawyers were asking the Supreme Court to let the government break a deal. He’s the ultimate dealmaker—and I’m sure he’d agree that when the United States gives its word, it should keep it. With all the talk about who’s being prosecuted and who isn’t, it’s especially unfair that Ghislaine Maxwell remains in prison based on a promise the government made and broke,” wrote David Oscar Markus.
The ultimate dealmaker wouldn’t break a promise, Markus said on Monday.
And then on Tuesday, the WSJ interviewed Trump for a story revealing that Trump had sent Epstein a letter boasting that “A pal is a wonderful thing” and referencing daily secrets and enigmas.
Aidala represented Maxwell in her Second Circuit Appeal but not her criminal case, which means that, like Markus, he’s not covered by the protective order in the case which, by the way, permits witnesses to use discovery for purposes other than their testimony, but not Maxwell’s own attorneys, and of course only covers Government attorneys (or former Government attorneys) if discovery is actually turned over to the defendants.
With all that in mind, let’s look closer at what WSJ — which doesn’t say whether it spoke with Markus or any of Maxwell’s attorneys from the criminal case — says about that letter and in the process, their sources for the story.
The first reference to the album — a bound book — describes documents that show Maxwell collected letters.
Maxwell collected letters from Trump and dozens of Epstein’s other associates for a 2003 birthday album, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
This is important: If Maxwell “collected” those letters, she might have not just the letters, but letters about the letters — the kind of thing that would provide further authentication for the chain of custody. Just as one example, during the Russian investigation, we learned some of what the Agalarovs and other well-connected Russians sent to Trump not from the Agalarovs themselves, but via the communications to Trump’s then Executive Assistant, Rhona Graff, passing them on.
There’s even an example of Rob Goldstone asking Graff to get Trump to contribute a note for a birthday book, precisely the same ask Maxwell would have made in 2003.
If Maxwell solicited a letter from Trump, she would have asked Trump’s assistant to get one for her, and Trump would have passed on the letter via the same assistant.
WSJ seems to have seen letters about letters. Which might explain why they’re not clear “how the letter with Trump’s signature was prepared,” but are sure that it came from him.
It isn’t clear how the letter with Trump’s signature was prepared.
Mind you, they’ve also seen the letters themselves — not just the Trump one, but letters from other famous people from whom WSJ solicited comment: Leslie Wexner and Alan Dershowitz.
The album had poems, photos and greetings from businesspeople, academics, Epstein’s former girlfriends and childhood pals, according to the documents reviewed by the Journal and people familiar with them. Among those who submitted letters were billionaire Leslie Wexner and attorney Alan Dershowitz.
[snip]
The longtime leader of Victoria’s Secret wrote a short message that said: “I wanted to get you what you want… so here it is….” After the text was a line drawing of what appeared to be a woman’s breasts. Wexner declined to comment through a spokesman. Wexner’s spokesman previously told the Journal that the retail mogul “severed all ties with Epstein in 2007 and never spoke with him again.”
Dershowitz’s letter included a mock-up of a “Vanity Unfair” magazine cover with mock headlines such as “Who was Jack the Ripper? Was it Jeffrey Epstein?” He joked that he had convinced the magazine to change the focus of an article from Epstein to Bill Clinton. Dershowitz, who represented Epstein after his first arrest, said, “It’s been a long time and I don’t recall the content of what I may have written.”
Wexner doesn’t want to talk about what documents might have once been in Epstein’s possession or might still be in Maxwell’s possession showing him joking about women with a sexual predator. Dershowitz, however, didn’t deny he sent a letter to Epstein laughing about framing Bill Clinton for something Epstein did, several years before Dershowitz would denigrate Epstein’s victims in a successful bid for a get out of jail free card for the abuser. He just claims not to remember that he was thinking of doing so before he actually had to help Epstein out of a terrible criminal jam.
I’ve read the WSJ article a bunch of times, and while they claim to have seen the letters (and possibly letters about letters), they don’t appear to claim they’ve seen the leather bound album itself. They are reporting on the existence of the album and the contents of the letters.
The existence of the album and the contents of the birthday letters haven’t previously been reported.
They know it was bound because several people involved in the process of getting it bound (this could be people both on Maxwell’s side and on Herbert Weitz’s team — he’s dead but his team might not be) told them who bound it.
The book was put together by a New York City bookbinder, Herbert Weitz, according to people who were involved in the process.
There’s one more thing about the album, something absolutely critical for understanding what is going on. Pages from the album were examined by DOJ officials back in 2019 and 2020, but WSJ has no idea whether they were part of the review Pam Bondi just did.
Pages from the leather-bound album—assembled before Epstein was first arrested in 2006—are among the documents examined by Justice Department officials who investigated Epstein and Maxwell years ago, according to people who have reviewed the pages. It’s unclear if any of the pages are part of the Trump administration’s recent review.
WSJ is certain they were in DOJ custody during the first Trump term. WSJ is not certain that those documents were among the ones Pam Bondi had 1,000 people review in 24-hour shifts before John Sauer kept delaying the decision about what to do about Maxwell’s appeal.
This doesn’t necessarily mean that WSJ has DOJ sources — or rather, former DOJ sources. It could be that witnesses were asked about the letters, which is how WSJ discovered they were in DOJ custody. But it’s worth noting that one of the prosecutors on both the Epstein and Maxwell prosecutions, Andrew Rohrbach, was among the people Emil Bove got fired for refusing to take part in Trump’s quid pro quo. Rohrbach isn’t the only one who’d be covered by that asymmetric protective order. Obviously, Maurene Comey, whom Trump fired the day after the interview with WSJ, would be too. But Rohrbach is one person who would know what prosecutors did in 2019, but probably not the review done in March. But then, so would a bunch of other people at SDNY if the Maxwell prosecution was one of the reasons Trump fired Geoffrey Berman.
With all that in mind, let me lay out something else.
This binder does not obviously show up in the inventory of things obtained in searches of Epstein’s various properties. Most of the binders included in the inventory contain CDs or photos, though item 1819 describes 10 binders, some of which may contain other things, and item 18140 is a bankers box with miscellaneous things. Nothing in the WSJ story says that DOJ had the binder itself.
It’s possible that DOJ obtained “pages from the leather-bound album” via email warrants targeting either Epstein or Maxwell, letters about letters.
But if those pages were obtained with a search warrant, they would not be covered by grand jury secrecy.
Moreover, nothing in either Epstein’s or Maxwell’s indictments would reflect testimony about the album. They rely on victim testimony, travel records, and phone records. And while Epstein’s indictment spans the same period — 2002 to 2005 — as the binder (which explains why DOJ would have obtained it), Maxwell’s indictment focuses on 1994 to 1997. If she got copies of the binder in discovery (and it’s not clear she would have), it would not have been central to her case.
The only other way this album would be covered by grand jury secrecy would be if it were subpoenaed. But wherever the album itself ended up by the time SDNY was investigating in 2018, it is extremely unlikely it was obtained via subpoena.
All of which is to say that it is virtually certain that Donald Trump instructed his defense attorney turned Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanche (because Blanche has not updated his NY bar membership, he shows up in the docket under his firm identity, as if he’s a defense attorney who happens to represent the government in this issue), to go look for this letter in one place he’s pretty sure it never appeared, the grand jury.
When JD Vance tried to dispute the WSJ story by crying that WSJ hadn’t shown “us” the letter, there’s a decent chance he said that knowing that the signed copy of the letter remains safely in DOJ custody — precisely where Trump knows his attorneys won’t look for it.
Update: Added screencap of Rob Goldstone email.
Do you know the status of the SCOTUS cert delayed request result, for Maxwell? If granted, is it briefed? Why the Jan. 2025 filing to appeal the Second Circuit opinion and not sooner is a curious question. The main point of the post is the alleged Trump letter, but all that denial and JD doing it leaving Trump a clean slate to state whatever, is all as expected. Too bad envelopes were not kept.
The Maxwell appeal to me is more interesting. Marcus has his resume online and it is solid: https://markuslaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/Resume-2023-David-Markus.pdf
Also, Marcus blogs: https://www.forthedefensepodcast.com/episodes/10#showEpisodes
The question of reach of a plea bargain between districts is interesting, given the recent decision about nationwide injunction vs. limiting injunction to the district granting it.
Trump’s much-ballyhoo’d call to unseal the grand jury testimony is really a performance of transparency rather than the thing itself. The administration knows full well that these witnesses weren’t asked about Epstein’s pals and fellow lechers. Of course Trump won’t show up in these “files,” should they persuade the judge(s) to violate rules and unseal them.
That’s the whole point of this gambit: to seize the mantle of transparency–at the expense of victims whose names may be redacted but whose identities may well be recognizable from other clues–while shielding the guilty (mainly Trump, it more and more appears) from further scrutiny.
Trump and his attorneys know that releasing grand jury records will require court approval and will take time. Not only is it a transparency ruse but a time waster. The media should be asking why Trump won’t release all information not in grand jury records while we wait for the court’s decision.
The NY Times had an article in Saturday’s digital edition outlining Trump’s relationship with Epstein. It said that no one has accused Trump of wrongdoing – the generality and absoluteness of that statement is curious.
We seem to be playing a connect the dots game where the object of the game is to avoid describing the picture created.
I find Vance’s last question in that message to be the most easily answered: Yes, the letter sounds exactly like the guy who boasted on a hot mic that he could just grab beautiful women by the pussy, because when you are a celebrity, they let you do it.
As for Trump’s lawyers not going to the DOJ to look for the letter, that may be the case. But with Trump having filed his lawsuit against the WSJ, you can be sure that they will ask the judge to subpoena the letter from them as part of discovery. And because Trump boasts of his whole unitary executive power, Trump (by his own definition) owns the DOJ and controls the letter, I think they’d have a decent chance of getting it.
But the language, the style — does that sound like Trump?
Your question points to the word games Trump’s defense may be playing. Trump’s letter to Epstein may be a joint effort, all of which would be signed off, ratified and approved, by Trump.
That is, an aide may have written the text, with edits by Trump, which would allow him to argue he didn’t “write it.” But the artwork is probably by Trump. If so, in court, these semantic games won’t go far in a civil action.
But let’s all hope that Aileen Cannon does not get the draw in the defamation case in SDFL
Yes. Apparently it was Ghislaine Maxwell who asked Donald Trump, among many others, to contribute letters for the album for Epstein’s 50th birthday—a book that was later bound. She likely was privy to the depths of the relationship between Trump and Epstein and the secrets they held. If Trump wanted his letter to be “the best of them all”, he could ask Ghislain—who apparently earned a degree in Modern History with Languages from Oxford—to help him write it. Also, the narration of the letter was in the third person—something which Trump is comfortable using when he speaks and writes.
Sounds like a younger Trump trying to impress his buddy who he knows is smarter than he is. The sniggers and inside jokes are Trump’s style.
Does it sound like the 79 year old guy who babbles and weaves – no.
Sounds just like a lying perv.
Donald, you are a lying perv.
Let’s repeat that.
Donald, you are a perv, a lying perv.
Even four years ago he was better at writing and speaking.
Let’s see: flattering himself, clearly prouder of his cleverness than he deserves to be, “enigma”?
I think it sounds just like him.
Regarding the use of “enigma” being outside Trump’s lexicon: there was a very popular movie with that as its title, released in ’01. IOW, that word was at that time well ensconced in popular culture.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enigma_(2001_film)
” … there’s a decent chance [Vance] said that knowing that the signed copy of the letter remains safely in DOJ custody …”
Hmm. I wonder whether JD has been `read into the program’.
Trump and people close to him must know that Vance is a power hungry snake who might be a loyal sycophant
in public but shouldn’t be trusted with incriminating information about the man
for whom he is the Constitutionally mandated successor.
Vladimir Futon is also Littlefinger.
My contention all along has been that Vance, with Theil and the Opus Dei Project 2025 cultists behind him (the latter being pre-vatican II Catholics who would love to get the upper hand over the fundamentalists running his FP), is waiting for the moment to ripen for the invocation of the 25th. If that’s the case, all of his Trump-defenses are performative, meant only to assure Trump that his VP is backing him fully.
Vance isn’t a dullard. He knows Trump’s Epstein history is metastasizing and that it all works to his advantage. The quickie trip he took last month for a one on one with Rupert definitely takes on a new hue, given all that. It will be interesting to note Trump’s interactions with JD, now that he’s sued Rupert over the Pubic Signature story.
This story came off as very odd to me for a number of reasons. First, it’s the kind of story that would be absolutely brutalized by the WSJ Editorial Page, and if they’ve said anything about it, it hasn’t been widely covered. (Someone else can read the damn thing. I’m not paying to get past that wall.) So either they’ve been told to “stand down” (not likely), or they asked the news side to the paper to show them the evidence, and they were convinced enough that they knew better than to say that the WSJ’s news side needed to cough up the evidence.
Second, this is hardly the most misogynistic thing that Trump has said or done. If I had to sit down and make a list, this probably wouldn’t make the Top 25. It was a drawing at the level of a 14 year-old boy wishing his friend a happy birthday, written more than 20 years ago, way back in Trump’s youth (his late 50s), before Trump knew better. Why bother denying it? Just say, “Mr Trump has signed a lot of things over the years.” and move on. If he doesn’t remember what he signed last week, you wouldn’t expect him to remember something he signed more than 20 years ago. The “Grab them by the p*ssy.” tape was more offensive, more raw, more recent, and more creditable than this, and nobody’s drawing the obvious wide-tipped Sharpie line between the two.
Third (and this kind of relates to the first two points), why is the WSJ–whose news side is known as one of the most trustworthy in the business–publishing this? Murdoch himself would’ve had to green light it. As you rightly noted, Pam Bondi appears to be in charge of a personnel-intensive effort to scrub Trump from the FBI’s Epstein files. And THAT’s a big story, which is likely where this is going. Bondi flubbed the last cover-up attempt–the memo saying there was nothing there–so it wouldn’t be surprising that she’s flubbing this one. This is an administration known for it’s lack of competent op-sec, and if you put a bunch of long-term FBI employees in charge of this kind of operation, you’ve got a bunch of people who DO know how to do op-sec, and who might just draw the line at destroying evidence related to a child sex trafficker.
So why publish this now? I can think of two reasons: One, you want even more sourcing, and anyone involved in this mess who has felt queasy about the whole operation now knows who to call. And two, this story is calculated to bring all of the usual suspects out to the Sunday talk shows (Lindsey may get to do the full Ginsburg!) and have them all talk about what an unreliable rag the WSJ is, and then drop the real blockbuster story early this coming week.
Time will tell.
I agree that the magnitude of the DJT freak out is puzzling since he has been implicated in much worse behavior over the years and he seems to have survived those fairly well (politically and judicially). What is so special about this Epstein situation? We are used to see a lot of theater and comedy, but involving thousands of FBI agents to go over records is not a performative action. This seems to suggest that, deep down, there is something worse than we have seen before. I am not holding my breath though, since they control much of the machinery to make this go away.
Because the Epstein business relates to pedophilia, which was and remains a big MAGA rallying-point. OTOH, “mere” women are fair game for that lot, it would seem. An extremely distorted morality field, but Trump prospers or fails within it, and he is very well attuned to its demands.
This affair is the hole in his Teflon(R) coating, he feels it, and it shows.
Makes me think of the worst possible Dude Bro Frat Boy MAGAt rationalization. It involves a metaphor about baseball and grass.
As you note later in your comment, no one at the WSJ ran this without approval or instigation by Rupert Murdoch.
It doesn’t seem relevant where these birthday wishes to Epstein fit within Trump’s lewd and misogynistic communications. The letter seems noteworthy because it’s about Epstein, because Trump’s base has fixated on his treatment as a symbol of the corruption of their version of the deep state, and because it won’t let it go, despite Trump’s demands. It’s become a rare albatross around Trump’s neck.
It seems probable that Rupert has decided he needs to bring Trump to heel. Why isn’t clear yet. But he’s doing so in a way that generates revenue for him, though not for Faux Noise, which is avoiding it, while he does it.
“If Maxwell solicited a letter from Trump, she would have asked Trump’s assistant to get one for her, and Trump would have passed on the letter via the same assistant.”
There’s also a typist involved. The letter was typewritten within a sketched outline. So the typist had to roll the sketch into the machine, then be careful not to type anything outside the outline, and careful again to leave a space for the signature – having been told where the signature was supposed to land.
As to Dershowitz, I’d be interested in a more detailed description of his fake Vanity Fair cover, because doesn’t Trump have some framed fake magazine covers of his own? In 2003, making a fake like that (unless it’s just a crude sketch) would’ve taken somebody quite a bit of time and effort: think QuarkXPress, InDesign or similar program. Did they both go to the same shop to get those covers done?
Not so difficult. I could personally have made a fake Vanity Fair cover even in the early 1990’s, using a scanner and products like Pagemaker and Photoshop on the Apple Mac. Someone skilled in those products, and with reasonable artistic ability, could easily have done it by 2003.
It’s also possible the typist came first. He or she typed the faux dialogue and then Trump added the drawing and signature.
Very true; but that would’ve required Trump to exercise some patience.
So did the Big Lebowski.
Thanks for this.
Letters about letters. Yes.
It’s not so much what Ghislaine knows but what evidence she has, where she has it and what happens to it if something untoward happens to her.
Fascinating.
Yes. Ms. Maxwell is very smart. Managed to hide out in comfort for a considerable period before she was apprehended.
Suppose she took this book into her personal possession at some point, and maybe deposited it somewhere safe, in case she needed to ask influential people for assistance. Maybe DOJ has never seen it.
Also, there is no “client list.” What, there’s a document on Jeffrey Epstein letterhead titled, “CLIENT LIST (Blackmail)”? Of course not. But there may be other things, like books of birthday greetings.
re-Rayne postings on Bear Stearns, etc. on previous post “NYT Falls for Trump’s Limited Hangout” on the 18th.
Random youtube shows up on my computer with a Whitney Webb talking about relationship with Tish, Dershowitz and Netanyahu https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6Syrt0gYZY
So I look up Webb and one of the things that shows up is https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vxurryk6veo where starting at about 19:40 Webb talks about Epstein, Bronfmans, insider trading at Bear, etc. There may have been more about him before this but I don’t recall so.
This is a crazy video.
Yes. Webb has been investigating this international community of billionaire families who influence or coerce governments and banks to amass ungodly amounts of wealth.
There are a number of Jewish families and politicians Webb has identified in her research and unsurprisingly is accused, unjustly IMHO and others, of promoting antisemitism, believing Israel should not exist and all the other accusations power players like APAC throw out when Jews draw attention for criming, especially at this level.
Unfortunately, because APAC and these families have a lot of power, Webb appears to be too toxic for first tier media (amount of views) leaving her down in third and lower tiers where a lot of conspiracies brew giving Webb’s work the unfortunate association of down the rabbit hole antisemitic conspiracy theories.
I don’t know about APAC, but AIPAC is effectively the US branch of Likud.
I don’t know much about Stephanie Koff, except I know Mary Trump had her on a podcast. But this interview with Greg Olear offers some interesting things to think about, especially in terms of finance and partners in crime.
And there are some surprising tidbits like the butler who moved to Moscow. I can’t really tell how much of this stuff has actually been authenticated, though:
Deconstructing the Epstein Myth: What MAGA Got Right About the Stakes 7/15/25
The dark ecosystem that created both Donald and Jeffrey: A conversation with Stephanie Koff about the world beneath.
https://gregolear.substack.com/p/deconstructing-the-epstein-myth-what
Stephanie Koff is known as Lincoln’s Bible on Twitter.
For a period in 2020ish, she and Greg Olear joined Zev Shalev on Narativ. She had the reputation as a mob researcher.
Here is a thread she posted about Trump and Epstein and Bear Stearns.
https://archive.is/Lp2GM
That archive link only documents the first post in the thread. Readers would otherwise have to log into Xitter to read it.
Better to use a threadreader app, take screenshots and share the screenshots from another site for hosting.
Reply to Rayne.
I’ve never used thread reader. I will take a look. And also I think I’ve seen a Twitter clone site someone has used here.
Here is the thread reader for the same thread, that someone else compiled.
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1147934688423497728.html
Another technique, which I just noticed yesterday, is to archive tweets and replace the user name with a letter i.
Archives with the username: only the tweet and subtweet are viewed.
Archives with “i”: it includes the previous tweet and some replies.
Here’s the same tweet, but archived with “i”.
https://archive.is/PHWMH
Also, this interview with Craig Unger tells us about 478 digital files of sex tapes allegedly from Jeffrey Epstein’s mansion that John Mark Dugan, from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Department, may have taken to Moscow when he moved there:
Trump and the Russians – Susan Zakin, 3/21/25
https://www.journaloftheplagueyears.ink/blog/trump-and-the-russians
Wondering how many county sheriff’s dept employees, who have been involved with investigating public/private corruption cases of national and international significance, up and move to Moscow.
And take evidence with them!
478 digital sex tape files going from Epstein’s place to Moscow could be another or even the reason Trump acts like such a good boy puppy to Putin.
Puts an entirely different spin on “p-tapes.”
Superb analysis, by far the most substantive thing I have seen to date on this topic. Personally, I doubt JD Vance has any inside knowledge at all, he is just reflexively playing attack dog. No reason for him to be in on any details.
My best guess as to the underlying reality (FWIW):
o There is no “client list” of plutocrats, no reason for Epstein to have “clients”. A list of girls? Of course, how else do you keep track of your prospects?
o But (more or less) all his pals knew what he was doing, if not the specifics. “Whoa, Jeff likes them young, eh? And he seems to have a new one every time we see him! (wink-wink, nudge-nudge)”
What I keep thinking when reading about the WSJ article and what’s since been written about*) is that it was also the WSJ that brought the “Stormy Daniels” case to the attention of the public in January, 2018 — what eventually led to Trump’s first and only criminal conviction, if only more than six years later.
*) I fully agree with the comments above that this post is great (as are Marcy’s previous posts on this subject), especially the argument that there must be letters about the letter. As to jon paul jones (at 11:11 am) and the typist possibly involved: I’d rather assume that the typing was first, and the doodle then been drawn around it.
Interesting that Vance and Usha made a quick fly-in, fly-out visit last month to lunch with Rupert Murdoch and crew at Rupert’s Montana ranch. https://apnews.com/article/jd-vance-montana-visits-rupert-lachlan-murdoch-d4f040113968ea5d702061cac6129ee4. Wonder who was on the menu.
JD needed Usha to translate for him. English is a hard language to learn.
When his family visited Disneyland this last month, he needed 50 Secret Service agents and others for security.
https://www.ocregister.com/2025/07/11/vice-president-vance-heads-to-orange-county-for-some-family-time/
Drama queen. As if anyone wants to harm an alleged couch-humper.