As I sit here this morning writing this letter, I feel something I haven’t felt in a long time.
Not rage. Not even shock.
Just a deep, nauseating disgust.
Disgust—not only at what Donald Trump has done, but at the people now lining up to excuse it, minimize it, or pretend it never happened.
Over the past week, I’ve watched pundits, influencers, and media figures trip over themselves to “fact check” the Wall Street Journal bombshell that Donald Trump personally sent Jeffrey Epstein a birthday letter—handwritten, no less—while trying to distance him from one of the most notorious pedophiles in modern history.
They say: “Well, we have no direct evidence Trump did anything wrong with Epstein.”
Let me say this as clearly as I can—as a father of seven, including three daughters:
You don’t need to watch someone commit the act to know the crime happened.
If the sky is rumbling with thunder, and you hear the rain pounding—and you walk outside to find everything soaking wet—you don’t need to see the storm to know it rained.
You need common sense.
And common sense, combined with mountains of circumstantial, legal, and spoken-word evidence, tells us what we’ve known all along:
Donald J. Trump is a sexual predator.
This is not opinion. This is not theory.
It’s fact.
In 2023, Trump was found liable for sexual abuse by a New York jury in the case brought by E. Jean Carroll. He appealed. He lost.
The verdict was upheld.
Let me repeat that for every media pundit still playing defense:
Donald Trump is, by legal definition, a convicted sexual abuser.
Trump and Jeffrey Epstein were not casual acquaintances. They were friends.
They partied together. They traveled together. They shared a disturbing fascination with young women.
Here’s Trump in 2002, in his own words:
“I’ve known Jeff for fifteen years. Terrific guy. He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”
Let’s talk about Katie Johnson, a girl who alleged that Trump and Epstein sexually assaulted her when she was 13 years old.
She filed a lawsuit.
She was threatened.
And then her case quietly disappeared.
But ask yourself—Trump sues everyone. He sued the Wall Street Journal for $10 billion. But he’s never sued Katie Johnson.
Because the one thing Trump can’t afford is discovery.
We’ve Heard Trump Admit Who He Really Is
We don’t just have to rely on court records or witness accounts. We’ve heard Donald Trump, in his own voice, show the world exactly who he is. From the Access Hollywood tape where he bragged to Billy Bush about grabbing women “by the pussy,” to his long-running appearances on Howard Stern where he joked about young girls, troubled teenagers, and even his own daughter, Ivanka—Trump has repeatedly confirmed what kind of man he is. These aren’t offhand slips or misunderstandings; they’re admissions, a window into the mind of someone who sees women as objects, prizes, or worse.
If you’ve ever doubted the pattern, all you need to do is listen to Trump speak. His own words are the strongest evidence of all.
We all remember the now-infamous Access Hollywood tape—where Trump casually bragged about sexually assaulting women:
“When you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything… Grab ’em by the pussy.”
That wasn’t locker room talk. That was a confession.
Then there’s his repeated appearances on Howard Stern, where Trump laughed and joked about women as if they were disposable objects.
One example that should turn your stomach: When asked about actress Lindsay Lohan, a troubled teenager at the time, Trump said:
“She’s probably deeply troubled and therefore great in bed.”
What kind of man talks like that about a child?
And then, the most disturbing of all—his repeated, unsettling comments about his own daughter Ivanka. On multiple occasions, Trump has said things like:
“If Ivanka weren’t my daughter, perhaps I’d be dating her.”
He said that. Publicly.
Over and over again, Trump has revealed who he is.
The words aren’t taken out of context. The context is the sickness itself.
And yet people still ask for more proof.
Michael Wolff has tapes of Epstein himself, discussing his ongoing relationship with Trump—while Trump was in the White House.
That wasn’t just old party-boy camaraderie. That was real power, and real influence, continuing even as Epstein faced arrest and prosecution.
Let’s not forget: Jeffrey Epstein died under Donald Trump’s DOJ.
Under Attorney General Bill Barr.
And I say this as someone who’s been prosecuted by Bill Barr’s DOJ:
That department wasn’t interested in uncovering the truth. It was interested in burying it.
What if Epstein’s arrest was never meant to bring him to justice—but to silence him permanently?
And who else, besides Donald Trump, had something to lose?
Is this why we’re seeing people like Pam Bondi and Kash Patel work overtime to shut down any real investigation into the Trump–Epstein nexus?
What else are they protecting?
Because this story doesn’t end with Trump.
This is about a network of predators, protected by a culture of power, wealth, and silence.
And unless we speak out, they will get away with it. Again.
We Are the Voice
I didn’t write this letter to go viral. I didn’t write it for clicks or headlines.
I wrote this because someone has to speak up.
We need to be the voice—for those who are too scared, those who can’t, and those being forced into silence.
We need to speak out against these predators.
We need to expose the cover-ups.
We need to stand up and say: Enough.
Because the only way this ends is if we come together.
Right here—through this community—we are not just a newsletter.
We are a family.
We are a movement.
We are the resistance against unchecked power and corruption.
We must shine a light on every predator hiding in plain sight.
We must fight for accountability—for every victim, every survivor, every person who’s been told to shut up, sit down, or move on.
We are that voice. And we will not be silenced.
Please, if this message speaks to you, join us.
💥 Share this letter far and wide.
📣 Re-stack it.
💬 Drop your thoughts in the comments.
🧾 Become a subscriber—and if you can, become a paid subscriber. It’s what keeps this movement alive.
If you want to support directly, you can contribute through Venmo at @lev-parnas.
Because I will never bow to billionaires. I will never bend to the corporate machines.
I’m here to bring you the truth—straight from the inside out.
Join me.
Stand with me.
Let’s speak truth to power—together.
With love,
Lev Parnas
More men like you need to object to what women have fought against since forever.
While abusing Katie Johnson, Trump reportedly threatened Maria, a twelve-year-old Hispanic girl, with deportation after the pair had administered what he considered subpar oral sex. That’s who he is.