After testifying before Congress, a group of women victimized by Jeffrey Epstein has announced plans to compile and release their own list of individuals linked to his sex trafficking operation. The Department of Justice (DOJ) has not disclosed the names, prompting survivors to take action to expose high-profile figures associated with Epstein’s network.

Lisa Phillips, a model who met Epstein in the early 2000s, revealed during a press conference that survivors will “confidentially compile the names we all know who were regularly in the Epstein world.” She emphasized that the effort would be led by victims themselves, with no external involvement.

The survivors are supporting a bipartisan petition introduced by Rep. Thomas Massie and Rep. Ro Khanna to force Congress to vote on releasing all federal files related to Epstein. The petition requires two more votes to pass but has garnered support from 212 Democrats and several Republicans, including Nancy Mace, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Lauren Boebert. Greene pledged to “disclose every damn name” of alleged abusers if given the chance.

The push comes after the House Oversight Committee released thousands of Epstein-related documents, though little new information was disclosed. President Trump criticized the transparency efforts as a “Democrat hoax that never ends,” citing prior document releases.

Survivors gathered at the U.S. Capitol alongside family members of Virginia Giuffre, Annie Farmer, and others to demand full disclosure of Epstein’s records. The victims’ advocacy highlights ongoing calls for accountability in one of the most notorious sex trafficking cases in U.S. history.