In the days following Jeffrey Epstein’s death while awaiting trial on sex‑trafficking charges, Anya (a pseudonym) answered the knock at her Manhattan apartment. Standing outside was Epstein’s brother, Mark, who informed her she needed to vacate immediately, she recounts.
For years, Anya resided in one of several East 66th Street apartments that Epstein kept to confine and exploit women. In an instant she was stripped of that shelter, yet she managed to flee the ordeal. (Mark Epstein maintains he had no knowledge of his brother’s misconduct.)
“I continue to grapple with the reality that I was subjected to abuse for years,” Anya states. “It wasn’t as if I were shackled to a door or confined in a cellar; the restraints were subtler, yet they were undeniably present.”
Epstein, who passed away in 2019 while facing charges for child sex‑trafficking, often described his enterprise as “a cult, with himself as its leader,” according to Anya.
She has provided the BBC with a seldom‑heard narrative of life as one of Epstein’s so‑called assistants, explaining how he exerted prolonged control over numerous victims.
The assistants comprised a cadre of women—about a dozen at any given time, Anya estimates—who were lodged by Epstein, expected to be on call around the clock, and routinely subjected to his sexual abuse.
Anya explains that they were lured in through sophisticated deceits and false promises of employment, after which Epstein commenced a campaign of coercive domination over virtually every facet of their existence, preying on any vulnerabilities he could identify.
She notes that he managed their finances, dictated their social interactions, and subjected them to psychological degradation. Epstein obsessively surveilled their physiques, Anya says, and compelled her to undergo an unnecessary, disfiguring surgical procedure.
Her testimony is corroborated by Sarah Kellen, another former assistant, who informed the U.S. House Oversight Committee earlier this year that Epstein portrayed himself as the women’s benefactor. “He was exceptionally skilled at eroding your capacity to make independent choices and preserve autonomy,” Kellen remarked, “which only deepened your reliance on him.”
A common misconception holds that only minors fall prey to such coercion, yet “adults can be groomed just as easily,” observes Dr. Tara Quinn‑Cirillo, a clinical psychologist specializing in coercive‑control survivors. “Anyone can be vulnerable to this dynamic,” she adds.
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