In a stunning on-air moment, Spencer Kuvin—the attorney representing several survivors of Jeffrey Epstein—called out the Trump administration for deliberately keeping the public in the dark about damning evidence tied to the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender.
“President Donald Trump says we don’t know what’s in those files. I know what’s in those files,” Kuvin told MSNBC’s Ana Cabrera during a Wednesday interview. “I know exactly what the government is keeping secret from the public. It’s the names of individuals who were socializing with Jeffrey Epstein.”
Let that sink in.
Kuvin’s bombshell wasn’t vague. He pointed directly to the types of evidence that remain buried—evidence he says includes “videotapes within [Epstein’s] homes” and a trail of financial transactions linked to “procuring young women,” including “transfers of assets and money in and out of Jeffrey Epstein’s accounts.”
If true, this isn’t just a scandal—it’s a cover-up with real victims, a paper trail, and apparently, video receipts.
And the man who Kuvin says knows more than anyone else? Alex Acosta. Yes, that Alex Acosta—Trump’s Secretary of Labor and the same U.S. attorney who greenlit Epstein’s now-infamous sweetheart deal in 2008.
“That’s what the public needs to know,” Kuvin said. “At the end of the day, the person who had all of this information, assessed the data, and created a substantial indictment against Epstein—which was then subsequently buried—is Alex Acosta.”
Kuvin wants Acosta under oath.
“The public needs to hear what he knows about the evidence that existed at the time, and he should be expected to provide testimony,” he said, calling on Congress to demand accountability.
The interview comes on the heels of an NBC News segment where Epstein survivors spoke out about the government’s continued inaction. According to reporting from the Washington Post, not only has the Justice Department failed to contact the victims before releasing critical information, but it also kept them in the dark about Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer to a cushy prison camp—a facility survivors referred to as the “country club prison.”
They weren’t informed about the interview the DOJ held with Maxwell either. Zero transparency. Zero communication.
Kuvin says this isn’t new—it’s a pattern of negligence that dates back to Epstein’s original plea deal.
“This started back in 2008 and 2009, when the federal government failed to inform victims about the deal with Epstein. They have repeatedly failed these victims for nearly twenty years,” he said.
He referenced a federal ruling out of Miami, where a judge found the government in violation of the Crime Victims’ Rights Act for keeping survivors in the dark about Epstein’s secret plea agreement.
“This is not just bureaucratic failure—it’s re-traumatization,” Kuvin argued. “The government has had multiple chances to do right by these survivors. And every single time, they’ve chosen silence, secrecy, and self-preservation over truth.”
“Enough is enough,” he concluded. “The public needs to demand accountability.”
If Kuvin is right—and if the files really do contain names, videos, and bank transfers—this isn’t a matter of curiosity. It’s a matter of justice.
Now the only question is: who’s going to force the truth out into the open?
Watch the full MSNBC segment below.