A Jeffrey Epstein survivor explained Wednesday why the client names in the Epstein files have not been made public yet.
Haley Robson, who was abused by Epstein as a teenager and not trafficked, told CNN anchor Pamela Brown that she and other survivors fear threats on their lives and have not shared any names associated with the disgraced late financier and convicted child sex offender for that reason.
"There are things that I knowthat legally I cannot say. Thereare things the other girls knowthat they legally cannot say. Itgoes back to the list," she explained. "A coupleof the girls said that theywould gather together someinformation. They would make alist. But it goes back toMarjorie Taylor Greene(R-GA) andThomas Massie (R-KY). If we were to geton the floor and start namingpeople, we would be sued intohomelessness. We would probablyend up murdered. I mean, ourlives would be dismantled andwe've gone through enoughtrauma and just being out hereand being so public, we'retaking a risk."
Political threats against the lawmakers leading the legislation have also escalated the survivors' fears about naming the other people involved in Epstein's abuse.
Greene declined to appear on CNN during the live broadcast on Wednesday, citing safety concerns, Brown explained.
The MAGA lawmaker has had a public rift with President Donald Trump, who called her a "traitor." Greene has reported that she has faced threats following these attacks from the president.
"Look at whatthey're doing to Marjorie Taylor Greene and Thomas Massie," Robson added. "Political violence doesn'tbelong in our country and oursociety. Everybody has a rightto believe in what they choose.Everybody has a right to be a Republican or a Democrat.Everybody has a right to believein what they choose to believe.And it doesn't matter whattheir political affiliation is,because it's a human issue."