Search for ‘buried girls’ begins at Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch as chilling claims resurface
A man who once lived on Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch has shared a chilling prediction about the site where it’s feared at least two girls were killed during rough sex sessions.
This week, police officers descended on the remote New Mexico ranch, where murky rumors have long swirled concerning these alleged dead girls, who some believe lie buried somewhere on the vast 7,500-acre property. This search follows the establishment of a truth commission, set up last month by local lawmakers, to determine what exactly happened at Zorro, back in the days of pedophile Epstein’s reign of terror.
However, 28-year-old Ean Royal, who lived at the now notorious ranch as a teenager, believes that, if there are bodies to be found amid the striking arid landscape, then they won’t easily be unearthed.

Ean lived in a small house close to Epstein’s desert mansion, where his father worked as a ranch hand for the disgraced financier for more than a decade. While Ean himself says he and his dad never witnessed any wrongdoing, with some staff being “kept in the dark" as to Epstein’s true nature, he reckons the sheer size of the sprawling estate would make hiding any bodies a relatively easy task.
Speaking with The Sun US, Ean remarked, “I don’t know if people have actually looked at this ranch to really see the size of it. It’s a lot of acreage, with roads running through it. I’ve been around on the four-wheeler and taken my time driving around and seeing its vastness. The thing is huge. He could, just logically speaking, if he really wanted to [bury someone], he had the space and the ability. He could have done it, no problem. It is very sickening. It’s ridiculous to even think about that.”
Reflecting that searchers will be unlikely to dig up the entire property, which is large enough to encompass a private airstrip, stables, and various smaller homes aside from the main mansion, Ean continued: "It is crazy that they never searched the place. The fact that they didn’t do anything soon enough is a problem. All of the investigative stuff happening now is long overdue.

“All of the investigative stuff happening now is long overdue. We’re late to the party. They didn’t do their job the first time they were there. Now it seems like they’re trying to backpedal and do the right thing. It’s almost like they’re doing it for public opinion, not for justice, and that’s a problem. It’s a waste of money and time without an understanding of what actually went down. If they’re going to spend millions of dollars looking for something, they don’t even know what they’re looking for. They should be putting the money into investigations, finding the people, and holding them accountable. We need the people, not the property.”
Epstein, who died by suicide behind bars in 2019, purchased Zorro Ranch in 1993 from former New Mexico governor Bruce King, and the mysterious site has since attracted a number of very serious allegations. The search of the grounds was carried out under the instruction of New Mexico attorney general, Raúl Torrez, acting on new information released in the Epstein Files, which includes information about bodies allegedly buried on the grounds.
These allegations date back to 2019 when radio host and former mayoral candidate Eddy Aragon received an anonymous email claiming the remains of "two foreign girls" had been buried "somewhere in the hills outside the Zorro", on Epstein’s orders. "Both died by strangulation during rough, fetish sex," the writer, who claimed to have worked at the ranch, alleged. Aragon then forwarded this disturbing email to the FBI, and it was later released amongst millions of other bombshell documents in the Epstein files.

Zorro Ranch, situated in the high desert south of Santa Fe, is mentioned numerous times in the Epstein Files, and it’s long been reported that this was among the sites used by the pedophile for sexual abuse and trafficking. New Mexico Department of Justice spokesman Lauren Rodriguez has stated that the new owners, the family of Texan real estate mogul Don Huffines, have granted access for the police search. As per the Mail Online, property tycoon Huffines has stated that he intends to turn the ranch, now known as Rancho de San Rafael, into a Christian retreat.

Editor-in-Chief
Read more similar news:
Comments:
comments powered by Disqus