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This document appears to be a screenshot of an affidavit signed, under the penalty of perjury, by “Tiffany Doe” noting that she “personally witnessed Defendant Trump telling the Plaintiff that she shouldn’t ever say anything if she didn’t want to disappear like the 12-year-old female . . .”
A resurfaced document from a 2016 civil lawsuit has recirculated online, drawing renewed attention to long-dismissed allegations against former President Donald Trump.
The screenshot, which appears to be from a sworn affidavit, is attributed to a pseudonymous witness identified as “Tiffany Doe.”
In the declaration—filed under penalty of perjury in support of a protective order in the case Jane Doe v. Donald J. Trump and Jeffrey E. Epstein—the affiant claimed to have “personally witnessed Defendant Trump telling the Plaintiff that she shouldn’t ever say anything if she didn’t want to disappear like the 12-year-old female Maria, and that he was capable of having her whole family killed.”
The broader lawsuit, initially filed in California under the name “Katie Johnson” (later refiled in New York as “Jane Doe”) in 2016, accused Trump and Epstein of sexually assaulting and raping the plaintiff when she was 13 years old during parties in the mid-1990s.
“Tiffany Doe” described herself in the filing as a former Epstein employee who recruited young women for events and said she directly observed multiple forced sexual encounters involving the plaintiff, including one incident with a 12-year-old girl referred to as “Maria.”
The case was voluntarily dismissed by the plaintiff in November 2016, days before a scheduled press conference and without any admission of falsehood.
No trial occurred, and Trump has consistently denied the allegations, with his representatives calling them baseless and politically motivated at the time.
The document has periodically reemerged on social media and in discussions tied to Jeffrey Epstein-related releases, though courts never substantiated the claims due to the dismissal.
Legal experts note that withdrawn civil suits of this nature often leave allegations untested in court.

