THE TRUMP LETTER IN EPSTEIN'S BIRTHDAY BOOK.
- lhpgop
- Sep 10
- 4 min read

THE FUNNY THING ABOUT THIS “LETTER”, REALLY A CONGRATULATORY NOTE FOR EPSTEIN’S 50TH BIRTHDAY.. is the fact that the Neo Con Republicans and many of the so-called “Conservative” influencers are the ones leading the charge on it’s importance and emphasizing Trump’s guilt. This 8 lined “Happy Birthday” is supposed to be the most encoded and damning document in the US at this moment.
It was supposedly obtained from Trump by Ghislane Maxwell for a 50th Birthday gift (a book of recollections and jokes) that she curated for her pal, Jeffrey Epstein.
So, here we will include the factual situation surrounding the letter and the “incredibly pornographic sketch” that goes with it.
It is a total nothing burger, but will provide hours of entertainment for the NEVER Trumpers. Enjoy
1) What the “Birthday Book” is (origin, audience, contributors)
What it is. A leather/calfskin-bound album titled The First Fifty Years, compiled in 2003 for Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday. It contains scanned messages, drawings, and photos from people in Epstein’s orbit. Ghislaine Maxwellorganized and curated the submissions.
Intended audience. Primarily Epstein himself (a commemorative keepsake), per Maxwell’s introductory framing; secondarily, it functions as a curated display of his network.
How it’s organized. Maxwell grouped entries under section headers such as Family, Brooklyn, Friends, Science, Business, Special Assistants, etc. Placement was the compiler’s choice, not self-designation by contributors. Heavy redactions appear in some personal categories.
Public release timeline. Details first surfaced via Wall Street Journal reporting in July 2025; the full digital album was then released by the House Oversight Committee on Sept. 8–9, 2025.
2) The “Trump letter” page — what’s on it (just the facts)
Format. A typewritten birthday message set within a hand-drawn outline of a nude woman; below the figure appears a signature “Donald.”
Dispute & denials. The White House (Press Sec. Karoline Leavitt) denied Trump wrote or signed it and said they’d welcome expert review.
Counter-analysis. Media and at least one handwriting expert argue the signature resembles Trump’s informal first-name autograph from the 1990s–2000s (distinct from his “Donald J. Trump” formal style).
Authorship of the text. Because the message is typed, authorship of the prose is unresolved; there’s no published forensic linguistic analysis tying the diction to Trump.
At the time Epstein’s Birthday Book was published in 2003, Donald Trump was primarily known as one of America's billionaire real estate moguls—his reputation built on high-profile developments in New York, casinos, and his celebrity persona.
However, a pivotal moment in his rise to broader national and cultural prominence came much earlier. In 1987, Trump released his first book, Trump: The Art of the Deal, co-written with journalist Tony Schwartz. This memoir-cum-business guide became a bestseller—holding the No. 1 spot on The New York Timeslist for 13 weeks and remaining on the list for 48 weeks in totalWikipediaSimple Wikipedia. The Art of the Deal played a crucial role in transforming Trump into a household name, significantly elevating his visibility beyond the real estate worldWikipediaThe New Yorker.
Note on speculation: claims that any intelligence service “could have helped” produce documents are not supported by evidence in the record; treat as conjecture only.
3) Why the page feels “mixed-signal”
Typewritten prose (not in his hand) alongside a personal first-name signaturethat shares traits with Trump’s known informal sign-offs, while lacking the angular, spiky full-name look of his public “business” signature. This combination fuels two competing interpretations: a) he signed a staff-drafted note; b) he signed and possibly contributed the concept; c) it’s an outright fabrication. None has been forensically proven.
4) How “racy” is Trump’s page versus others?
Trump’s page is suggestive (nude outline) but not the most explicit content in the album:
Sexualized drawings involving minors & massage scene (one page juxtaposes Epstein giving balloons/lollipops to young-looking girls labeled “1983,” alongside a sexualized massage cartoon with “Lolita Express” overhead).
Les Wexner contributed a drawing of female breasts with a cheeky note.
Henry Rosovsky (Harvard) supplied a commissioned “tit print.”
Nathan Myhrvold sent animal-mating photos (e.g., zebra genitals visible).
A novelty “check” page quips that Epstein “sold” a woman to Trump for $22,500—described by multiple outlets as a crude, jokey caption; there’s no external evidence this amount has any real-world relevance in Trump–Epstein dealings.
Bottom line: On any “most questionable/raciest” scale, Trump’s page is not at the top compared with entries that openly sexualize women (and, disturbingly, minors) or use dehumanizing gags.
5) Clinton’s entry for contrast
Bill Clinton contributed a handwritten note in his recognizable cursive—reflective and affectionate in tone (praising “childlike curiosity,” friendships, etc.). The handwritten format contrasts with Trump’s typed page.
6) Evidence gaps & authenticity status
Original vs. digital. The original bound volume is believed to be retained by Epstein’s estate; Congress was provided a digital scan. There has been no publicly documented, page-by-page forensic side-by-side comparison between the physical original and the released electronic version.
Where it leaves the “Trump letter.”
Signature authenticity: contested; one expert says it’s “absolutely” his; the White House denies.
Text authorship: unknown (typed). No linguistic report published.
Provenance chain: digital release via Oversight Committee; original not publicly exhibited.
| Contributor / Context | Nature of Content |
| ----------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------- |
| Epstein drawing with girls & massage | Ephebophilic imagery combining minors and sexual content |
| Les Wexner | Drawing of female breasts with a suggestive message |
| Henry Rosovsky | Explicit “tit print” |
| Nathan Myhrvold | Photos of animals mating, including visible animal genitals |
| Leon Black | Bawdy poem referencing women with sexual metaphors |
| Topless Maxwell photo & sexy cartoons | Sexualized visuals involving nudity, children, and animals |
| Assistant narratives | Memoirs of partial nudity and intimate encounters |




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