Trump accuser makes bold prediction about Epstein network’s unraveling

A woman who alleges Donald Trump sexually assaulted her more than 30 years ago says she believes the network of people connected to Jeffrey Epstein is on the verge of being fully exposed as more survivors will come forward this year to detail their experiences.

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Beatrice Keul, a former Miss Switzerland and Miss Europe contestant, made the prediction in a recent interview, telling PunchUp that “the dam is about to burst.” Keul, now 55, has previously alleged that Trump assaulted her in 1993 at the Plaza Hotel during his “American Dream Pageant” in New York when she was 23, and that Epstein separately approached her the same day, introducing himself as “Don’s best friend.”

Keul’s renewed prediction comes alongside new claims about ongoing intimidation she says she’s faced since going public with her allegations in October 2024. She told PunchUp she received an AI-generated audio message on her personal cellphone from an anonymous number around the time of Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre’s death in April 2025.

“We know where you are, and we will get you,” the message repeatedly warned.

Keul says similar messages have continued since, with the most recent arriving about a month ago. She says she doesn’t know who is behind them but believes they were designed to frighten her into silence.

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Powerful figures connected to Epstein, Keul says, have strong incentives to keep survivors from speaking, and she believes some women have stayed quiet after watching others get targeted or publicly discredited. She also rejected the official finding that Epstein died by suicide in 2019, telling PunchUp, “This is not a guy who would commit suicide.”

Despite the pressure she describes, Keul says she remains committed to speaking out and has completed a book detailing her experiences, which she says is now with lawyers ahead of publication. She frames her continued willingness to talk as itself part of why she believes a larger reckoning is coming, suggesting that as more women see survivors like her continue speaking despite threats, additional accusers will feel emboldened to come forward and connect the dots across the broader Trump-Epstein network.

The White House has denied any wrongdoing by Trump, with spokeswoman Abigail Jackson stating that the president has been “totally exonerated” regarding Epstein.

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