
A collection of released Jeffrey Epstein photos includes images of President Donald Trump and the former prince Andrew Mountbatten.
The 19 pictures, released by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee today, feature other highly influential figures, including Bill Gates, former president Bill Clinton and Richard Branson.
Donald Trump is in three photos, including one of him surrounded by women, whose faces have been blocked out.
Another photo shows condoms with sketches of Trump on them and ‘I’m HUUUUGE!’ printed on the bottom.
One of the images released is of former prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Bill Gates.
It appears to be a cropped version of an image taken by a professional photographer, available to view online, with the fuller image depicting King Charles – then the Prince of Wales.
The images are from Epstein’s estate and were obtained by the Republican-led committee as part of its ongoing investigation.
None of the images indicate any sexual misconduct and there is no suggestion the women pictured are underage.
It is unclear who took the photos and when as they are undated.
In another, Bill Clinton is pictured with Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein and another woman, signed with what appears to be a Bill Clinton ‘signature’.
Trump has previously said he ended his friendship with Epstein long before the late financier and socialite’s first conviction in 2008.
The images are not from the Epstein files that the US Department of Justice ordered to be released by December 19.
Other famous figures included in the collection are Trump’s confidante Steve Bannon, former Harvard president Larry Summers, lawyer Alan Dershowitz and actor Woody Allen.
Democrat representative Robert Garcia said in a statement that the committee is looking at ‘over 95,000 photos’ from Epstein’s estate.
He claimed even more would be released to the public ‘in the days and weeks ahead’.
But a spokesperson for the the Republican-led Oversight Committee has criticised the Democrats for the release, saying they were ‘cherry-picking photos’.
They added that ‘targeted redactions’ aimed ‘to create a false narrative about President Trump’.
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