A newly surfaced document from the latest tranche of Epstein files has drawn scrutiny from investigators, advocates and legal analysts after a 32-page diary attributed to one of Jeffrey Epstein's victims described what the writer called extreme coercion, psychological control and a claim that she was used "as an incubator" to carry a child allegedly involving Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. The diary, now circulating among journalists and advocacy groups, has not been independently verified, and its claims remain allegations.

According to the diary entries, the writer recounts living under what she described as total domination by Epstein, saying that "everything" in her life was dictated, including education and potential moves. The entries repeatedly reference "exhaustion," "confusion" and "fear," language that survivor advocates say is consistent with trauma narratives documented in prior cases.

The most explosive assertion appears in passages where the writer says she was treated "like an incubator," claiming she was forced to carry a baby girl for Epstein and Maxwell. The diary also alleges she was told her hair and eye color were part of a "superior gene pool," language the writer explicitly compared to Nazi ideology. No evidence has emerged confirming the existence of any child linked to Epstein.

The diary's portrayal of Maxwell is volatile and shifting. The writer alleges Maxwell alternated between warmth and hostility, at times acting intimately and at others as an adversary. One passage describes Maxwell placing her hand on the victim's stomach at Epstein's direction, an episode the writer said left her "deeply upset and confused."

That depiction aligns with arguments prosecutors made during Maxwell's 2021 trial, when she was convicted of sex trafficking related to the grooming and abuse of underage girls. Prosecutors argued Epstein exercised overarching control while Maxwell functioned as a recruiter and enabler.

Other portions of the diary include clipped notes reflecting on consent and language. In one, the writer criticizes the term "child prostitute," arguing that exploitation involves the repeated selling of a child's body. Another note alludes to seeing prominent figures at locations such as Mar-a-Lago, without making specific allegations against named individuals. Mar-a-Lago is owned by Donald Trump, who purchased the property in 1985; being referenced in the diary does not imply wrongdoing.

Skeptics caution that documents appearing in newly uploaded Epstein files should be treated as unproven unless corroborated. Survivor advocates counter that contemporaneous writings can illuminate the psychological reality of abuse. They note that multiple women have publicly described patterns of grooming, manipulation and coercion linked to Epstein and Maxwell over decades.

Among those who have spoken publicly is Virginia Giuffre, who wrote that abuse "eroded [her] ability to comprehend reality and prevented [her] from defending [herself]." During Maxwell's trial, witnesses including Annie Farmer testified about recruitment and abuse, while Courtney Wild said Epstein's death "robbed" victims of confronting him in court.