COPS SWARM Epstein’s Zorro Ranch In Hunt For STRANGLED Girls’ Bodies

Witnesses reveal drugged victims and twisted eugenics schemes

New Mexico authorities have finally unleashed a massive search operation at Jeffrey Epstein’s infamous Zorro Ranch, scouring the 7,500-acre property for the bodies of at least two girls allegedly strangled during violent sex sessions. 

The raid, involving state Department of Justice agents, police, and the local sheriff’s office, kicked off Monday and spilled into Tuesday—marking a long-overdue crackdown on the elite predator’s isolated playground.

This move comes hot on the heels of the state’s newly formed “truth commission,” aimed at exposing Epstein’s depravities after federal probes fell flat. 

The search targets longstanding rumors of deaths at the ranch near Stanley, New Mexico, where Epstein’s victims may lie buried. “For years talk of the deaths has swirled around Zorro Ranch in the tiny town of Stanley, 30 miles south of the state capital, Santa Fe – but the identities of the girls have never been known,” the Daily Mail reported. 

Law enforcement now believes they can locate the remains and identify the victims, running parallel to the truth commission established last month.

State Representative Andrea Romero, who spearheaded the commission, didn’t hold back on the failures that allowed this to fester. “We have heard years of allegations and rumors about Epstein’s activities in New Mexico, but unfortunately, federal investigations have failed to put together an official record,” she said. 

She continued, “With this truth commission, we can finally fill in the gaps by investigating the failures that led to the horrific allegations of abuse and crime at Zorro Ranch, so we can learn from them and prevent such atrocities from taking place in our state going forward.”

The operation unfolded just one day after hundreds of protesters rallied at the ranch—now renamed Rancho de San Rafael by its new owner, Texas real estate baron Don Huffines—on International Women’s Day to support sexual abuse victims. 

New Mexico Department of Justice spokesman Lauren Rodriguez confirmed the Huffines family granted full access, including surrounding public land. Huffines, who plans to transform the site into a Christian retreat, has distanced himself from its dark past.

Epstein snapped up the property in 1993 from former New Mexico governor Bruce King, turning the 13-square-mile desert expanse into a hub for abuse and worse. The compound boasted a 26,700-square-foot hacienda, guest lodges, stables, a private airstrip, and helipad—ideal for discreet arrivals of VIP guests and trafficked girls. 

After Epstein’s 2019 jail death, the estate sold for an undisclosed sum following price drops from $27.5 million to $18 million.

Beyond the alleged murders, witnesses are now exposing Epstein’s obsession with eugenics and nonconsensual experiments. 

“We have people coming forward saying they were drugged, had sex organs and sperm harvested from their bodies, and woke up around medical equipment not knowing where they were or what happened to them,” Romero told the Daily Mail. 

These accounts echo Epstein’s reported scheme to impregnate women at the ranch to breed a “superior” bloodline, as detailed in a 2019 New York Times investigation.

Romero acknowledged the surreal nature of the claims but stressed the need for truth. “It’s so dark and perplexing, and I know that if you mention this to someone, it sounds very conspiratorial,” she said. “But we need to get down to the truth of what really happened here in our own backyard.”

As we previously highlighted, lawmakers launched the probe amid gruesome burial claims, and fresh files exposed Epstein’s alleged sign-off on horrific medical acts against women—painting a picture of unchecked evil shielded by powerful connections.

One email within the trove of files documented a claim from a former Epstein staffer claiming “somewhere in the hills outside Zorro, two foreign girls were buried on orders of Jeffrey and Madam G” (Ghislaine Maxwell). 

We also highlighted Epstein’s alleged orchestration of a gruesome medical procedure, where a doctor “put 35 stitches in [a vistim’s] head” on a dining room table after an ATV accident, underscoring his control over victims’ bodies.

Republican state Representative Andrea Reeb, a former district attorney set to join the commission, slammed the state’s prior inaction. “Zorro Ranch has given New Mexico a black eye. We as a state haven’t been aggressive enough on figuring out what happened there,” she said, adding “My main interest is to see if we can bring justice to some of the victims.”

The commission, armed with $2.5 million and subpoena power, will probe ties to figures like the late Gov. Bill Richardson and former AG Gary King, whose family sold the ranch. Tips have flooded in—25 to 30 since October—detailing abuses, including a woman claiming her sex organs were experimented on as a toddler.

Epstein’s ranch hosted accused guests like Prince Andrew, per Virginia Giuffre’s claims, and unverified visits by Bill Clinton. Victims like sisters Maria and Annie Farmer recounted assaults there in 1996, with Annie saying she was 15 when directed “to take off all her clothes and get on a massage table.”

Former maid Renee Burns, who worked there from 2005-2010, described Epstein as a “narcissist and a terrible person” but claimed she saw no illegal acts—though she admitted not accessing every corner. 

Maintenance worker Manolito Royal, employed for 17 years, noted “a steady flow of guests he was told were models” and pleaded the Fifth on prominent visitors.

As the search continues, it exposes how globalist elites under Epstein evaded justice for decades, protected by complicit systems.

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