Courtney Wild stood in front of the camera years ago and laid it out straight. As a teenager she delivered 50 to 70 girls to Jeffrey Epstein. She recruited her own friends. She brought them into his houses in Palm Beach and New York and on his island. She did it after he had already abused her. The operation ran on a simple system:
- Groom one girl, turn her into a recruiter, and let her pull in the next wave of fresh targets.
Wild started at 14. Epstein and his handlers spotted her in Florida. They used money, attention, and the promise of modeling work. Once they had control over her body and her trust, they flipped the script. She went back to her circle of teenage friends and told them the same lies she had been told. “Come meet this rich guy. He can help you. He pays cash for massages.”
"I brought him 50 to 70 girls"
— conspiracybot (@conspiracyb0t) April 21, 2026
An Epstein survivor describes how she recruited her own friends as a teenager pic.twitter.com/6JaNUC2yl7
The girls went. Many ended up in the same rooms, on the same beds, with the same cameras rolling.
This was not random predation. This was a production line built to feed Epstein’s network.
- One victim becomes the lure for the next ten.
- The younger the recruiter, the more effective she was at lowering the guard of other minors.
Wild has described how she kept going back, kept bringing new girls, even while carrying the damage from what happened to her. That cycle kept the supply constant for years.
The power structure around Epstein made this machine run without interruption.
- Pilots flew the girls.
- Staff scheduled the appointments.
- Money moved through accounts that never triggered alarms.
Intelligence connections sat in the background, watching and collecting. Every name on the flight logs, every property wired for surveillance, every sealed document points to protection at the highest levels. The 2008 sweetheart deal in Florida let the operation continue long after it should have been shut down. Wild and other survivors fought in court just to force basic transparency, and they hit walls at every federal agency.
Globalist networks and elite circles benefited from the silence. Epstein moved in those circles because he delivered what they wanted—access to young bodies, recorded leverage, and total deniability. The recruiters like the teenage Wild were disposable tools in that system. They carried the guilt and the trauma while the real operators stayed insulated.
The facts remain buried in redacted files and dismissed lawsuits. Dozens of victims described the same recruitment pattern. One girl pulls in another. Payments flow. Names get added to the list. The machine only slowed when Epstein was finally arrested in 2019, but the full network never faced real exposure. Court records, victim statements, and flight data all line up with what Wild said on camera: she brought him 50 to 70 girls as a teenager.
This is how the operation worked from the inside. A controlled victim becomes the best recruiter because she speaks the language of the targets. She knows the promises that work. She carries the shame that keeps her compliant. The system counted on that psychology to scale the abuse without constant direct involvement from the top.
Wild’s account exposes the mechanics. Epstein did not hunt alone. He built a pyramid of victims who fed the next level. The protection he enjoyed came from institutions that still refuse to release the complete evidence. Every sealed name, every uncharged associate, every ignored flight log confirms the depth of the control system that allowed this to run for decades.
The girls Wild recruited paid the price in silence and damage that lasts a lifetime. The operation treated them as inventory. The same power structure that shielded Epstein continues to block full accountability today. Wild delivered the numbers straight: “50 to 70.”
That single testimony maps the scale of the machine they built and the machine they still protect.

