Overview
- Hundreds gathered outside the former Zorro Ranch in a flagship Women’s March action, part of more than 270 events calling for accountability tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s abuses.
- Virginia Giuffre’s brothers visited the ranch for the first time and urged the U.S. Department of Justice to release unredacted records, including names of visitors to the property.
- New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez reopened a criminal investigation in February following new DOJ document releases and pledged a public report, urging survivors to come forward.
- The state legislature established a bipartisan truth commission with subpoena power to examine how Epstein operated at the ranch and to document institutional failures.
- Organizers say federal probes have largely stalled since 2019, leaving more than 150 identified survivors without justice, and they are also promoting reforms such as Virginia’s Law to ease civil claims for adult survivors.