May 19, 2026 NEW YORK, NY The hidden horrors of the most prolific sexual predator in American history are being read aloud to the world—and the raw, unfiltered reality is leaving onlookers absolutely shattered.
Inside a shadowy Tribeca art gallery at 101 Reade Street, a historic and deeply emotional 24-hour global live stream began on Monday afternoon. The venue? The provocatively named Donald J. Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Memorial Reading Room.
Surrounded by hundreds of heavy white volumes containing three million pages of unsealed court documents, survivors and advocates have stepped up to a podium to do the unthinkable: read the depraved details of their own trauma live on camera, forcing the world to look away from the standard news cycle and face the truth.
The Moment the Gallery Went Silent
Dani Benski, an Epstein survivor and dance teacher, was the first to take the podium. Gripping a massive white book, her voice trembled but remained resolute as she kicked off the marathon broadcast.
The emotional gravity in the room was suffocating. Attendees were seen cupping their mouths, desperately holding back tears as the speakers read literal transcripts of the billionaire sex offender demanding his underage victims undergo gynecological exams.
For Benski, the decision to participate was driven by a fierce desire to protect the next generation.
“I actually did come look at my own files, and it’s a lot, and it’s really heavy, but I think that it’s so important,” Benski revealed after stepping away from the microphone. “I’m a dance teacher... I usually teach that age range of like 15 to 19-year-old students, and I just remember being that age and experiencing all the horrors that happened. We have to keep the fight alive to make it safer for them.”
"This Is Not a Hoax": Survivors Reclaim Their Stories
As the reading progressed, a devastating realization washed over the gallery. The survivors in attendance spanned entirely different generations—a stark, visual testament to just how many decades Epstein was allowed to operate with total impunity.
In a powerful moment of solidarity, the women gathered around a massive wall timeline of Epstein's life. One by one, they wrote personal messages on notes and pinned them directly to the specific years they were abused.
Sharlene Rochard, another survivor who stood before the cameras, issued a chilling reminder to everyone watching the stream at home:
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Three Million: The staggering number of pages compiled in the files.
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The Velvet Ropes: The gallery shelves are lined with rows of books, but they aren't fiction.
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The Message: "It just looks like paper, books," Rochard warned. "But what’s really important is to remember that we are actually real. This is not a democratic hoax... these are our stories in here, and they bring back really traumatic memories."

Fighting the "Bouncing Ball" of Mainstream Media
The 24-hour marathon was organized in part by the Save America Movement. Organizers openly admitted that the event was deliberately designed to shock the public consciousness and hijack a media landscape they claim is being manipulated.
Mary Corcoran, the executive director of the movement, wept openly during the readings but insisted that the grueling 24-hour event was entirely necessary to keep the pressure on powerful figures.
“The idea is to create a very significant media moment to bring the American conscience back to this story and not let it flow out with the day-to-day news cycle, which Trump has been dictating in order to avoid this story," Corcoran stated bluntly. "Unfortunately, the media tends to follow the bouncing ball wherever Trump tells them to go, and that’s why we have to create a media moment like this to ensure that people are paying attention.”
The non-stop broadcast, which has captured the attention of thousands of viewers worldwide, is scheduled to finally reach its emotional conclusion at noon on Tuesday, May 19. Until then, the reading continues, page by painful page.
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