In Kaylee McGhee’s Dec. 12, 2019, screed against me, she asserts that I have not “disproved” the false accusations against me by Virginia Giuffre. McGhee is demonstrably wrong.
I have emails and a manuscript from Giuffre herself implicitly acknowledging that she never met me. She claims she saw me once, discussing business with Jeffrey Epstein, but she never claimed to have had sex with me until she met her lawyers years later.
I have documentation — travel, cellphone, TV and court appearances, American Express bills — of where I was every single day during the period of time that Giuffre knew Epstein. The documentation conclusively proves that I was not, and could not have been, in the places she claimed to have met me. Her own lawyer, after reviewing this documentation, admitted, in recorded conversations, that it would have been “impossible” for me to have been in those places and that his own client was “wrong … simply wrong” to accuse me. Her lawyers withdrew the accusation.
My total innocence was confirmed by a thorough investigation by the former director of the FBI. Moreover, Giuffre told the FBI who she had sex with, but specifically omitted me, as she did in telling numerous other people about her alleged sexual partners.
Giuffre has a long history of making up stories about prominent people. She accused Tipper and Al Gore, as well as Bill Clinton, of being on Epstein’s island. Secret Service and other records prove she made up the entire stories, as she made up her story about me.
I have documented additional dispositive evidence of my total innocence in my new book Guilt by Accusation: The Challenge of Proving Innocence in the Age of #MeToo. If this evidence does not disprove Giuffre’s lies, what would?
I did absolutely nothing wrong, and I will not change my behavior or actions based on Giuffre’s false accusations or McGhee’s misguided commentary.