Donald Trump just showed up — allegedly — somewhere no one would ever want to be found.

”Spending time” at Jeffrey Epstein’s house with one of the convicted child-sex predator’s victims.

The allegation is one of several politically radioactive revelations in emails released by the Democrats on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Wednesday. They are part of a trove of materials provided to the committee by Epstein’s estate.

Trump will have a hard time lying his way out of this one. Give White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt an “A” for effort, though.

“In a statement on Wednesday, Leavitt said, ‘The Democrats selectively leaked emails to the liberal media to create a fake narrative to smear President Trump.’” CNN reported.

“‘The ‘unnamed victim’ referenced in these emails is the late Virginia Giuffre, who repeatedly said President Trump was not involved in any wrongdoing whatsoever and ‘couldn’t have been friendlier’ to her in their limited interactions,’ Leavitt said.”

That might be a bit more plausible were it not for the fact that Leavitt’s statement blows up every syllable of every word of denial that Trump has uttered for years about having little to do with Epstein. Now, she’s not even denying he was at Epstein’s house — just that if he was, it was to spend time with the one (deceased) Epstein victim who says Trump was nice to her.

Funny, they never mentioned that exculpatory detail before in all the coverage of Giuffre’s death and subsequent book release.

Well, if it’s not a news story, why was Leavitt putting out an instant statement about it?

The emails cut through years of calculated denial. The core evidence is a 2011 exchange between Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, long after Trump and Epstein were supposedly estranged.

Epstein wrote to Maxwell: “I want you to realize that that dog that hasn’t barked is Trump.”

Then came the definitive line: “[A victim] spent hours at my house with him … he has never once been mentioned.”

That single email destroys the entire narrative. This wasn’t Trump hearing rumors about Epstein’s operation. It was Trump spending hours at Epstein’s house with one of the victims — and saying nothing.

The 2011 date is what makes this impossible to escape. Epstein had no reason to lie in private correspondence to his closest co-conspirator. Trump was a reality TV host with no political power. He couldn’t grant pardons or commute sentences. The email wasn’t a threat or blackmail play. It was a statement of calculated, relied-upon truth between two people who understood the power of silence.

That reality explains Trump’s desperate obsession with burying the full Epstein files. He promised transparency during the campaign. Then he actively obstructed Congress. His administration stonewalled investigators. Republicans split over it. Right-wing supporters broke with him. Now we know why: these emails don’t just contradict his story — they place him in the room.

Every denial collapses under that timeline. Trump didn’t “barely know” Epstein. Their falling-out wasn’t a simple Palm Beach real estate squabble. Trump wasn’t some peripheral figure at a few parties.

The record gets worse. In 2019, months before Epstein’s arrest, Epstein emailed author Michael Wolff that Trump “knew about the girls, as he asked Ghislaine to stop.” You don’t ask someone to stop unless you have concrete knowledge of what they’re doing. And you don’t spend hours in a predator’s house with a victim unless you understand exactly where you are and what is being ignored.

It’s hard to fathom why Maxwell would be asked “to stop” unless she was seen as holding the ultimate currency — firsthand knowledge of what Trump knew and when he knew it. Maxwell, of course, is another person Trump publicly claimed he hardly knew but somehow — after an unprecedented softball interview in prison from Todd Blanche, Trump’s personal lawyer (now Deputy Attorney General), by pure coincidence — Maxwell found herself transferred from the worst women’s prison possible to the system’s Ritz-Carlton equivalent.

Sudden white-glove treatment of a felon sentenced to 20 years hard time for sex-child trafficking.

It happens.

This is why Trump has fought relentlessly to keep these files sealed. From all appearances, he simply cannot withstand the truth coming out.

The House is now expected to vote on release of the Epstein files, an event I’ll believe when I see it. It does appear that House Speaker Mike Johnson has finally run out of tricks to delay the swearing in of Rep. Adelita Grijalva, D-AZ, a cool 50 days after she won her seat in a special election.

Grijalva has been seen as the pivotal vote, allowing Democrats and four Republican defectors to call for the full release of the files. But even if that happens — and there’s no guarantee it will — count on Trump to pull out every stop to keep those files from seeing the light of day.

This fight is a long way from over.

You see, Trump knows what’s in those files because he was there.

And now, thanks to Epstein’s own words, we’re beginning to find out as well.