
Who She Is
Jena-Lisa Jones grew up in Palm Beach, Florida. She has described having ‘a terrible home life’ but being ‘such an innocent kid.’ She was 14 years old and in ninth grade when she was recruited into Epstein’s orbit in 2003 — through a peer network with the promise of making \-\ for giving massages. She did not come forward publicly until 2019.
What She Says Happened
Jones has described her abuse to BBC, CNN, CBS News, Channel 4 News, and NBC. ‘I was in ninth grade. I was hopeful for life, and he stole a lot from me at 14.’ She recalls seeing framed photographs of Epstein with famous people inside his home, deepening her fear that no one would ever believe her. On the ongoing impact: ‘It never goes away. It changed my whole life. It changed my perspective on life. It made me have to fight for everything that I have and to even be here. It consumes me daily.’ (Channel 4 News, 2026.) On the failure of the system: ‘There were many, many adults around Epstein’s properties that may not have participated but very clearly knew what was going on. And they’re not saying anything, and why are they still not saying anything?’ On the politics around the files: ‘I voted for you [Trump], but your behavior on this issue has been a national embarrassment.’
What She Did About It
Jones participated in legal proceedings and the Epstein Victims’ Compensation Program. She has been active in lobbying for the Epstein Files Transparency Act and personally appealing to members of Congress. She appeared at the Capitol Hill press conference in September 2025, has visited Congress multiple times, and was interviewed by Channel 4 News in 2026. She is one of the most active public advocates among the Palm Beach survivors.
Timeline
- 2003: Recruited at age 14 in ninth grade in Palm Beach
- 2019: Came forward publicly for the first time
- 2019: Participated in the Epstein Victims’ Compensation Program
- September 2025: Spoke at Capitol Hill press conference; confronted Trump’s inaction
- 2025-2026: Multiple Congressional visits; lobbied for Epstein Files Transparency Act
- 2026: Interviewed by Channel 4 News on ongoing impact
Sources
- Miami Herald: “Perversion of Justice” — Julie K. Brown’s 2018 investigative series on Epstein’s Palm Beach abuse
- NPR: Epstein survivors join lawmakers calling for full release of government files — Capitol Hill press conference (September 2025)
- DOJ SDNY: United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell — federal sex trafficking prosecution
- Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich — Netflix documentary (2020) covering Palm Beach survivor accounts
- Giuffre v. Maxwell, 1:15-cv-07433 — CourtListener, SDNY (unsealed records 2024)
Information compiled from public court records, news reporting, and published accounts. This page documents survivor testimony as a matter of public record.