Lesley Groff, Epstein and the Other Women

Epstein did not act alone. He was enabled by a bevy of women, such as Lesley Groff, who served his nefarious desires. 


Sarah Kellen/Kensington/Vickers is accused of recruiting and scheduling up to six sessions a day in the Palm Beach mansion in the early 2000s.


She allegedly prepared the oils and the lotions in the rooms where the sex abuse occurred.


There have been other serious allegations against Kellen. During a testimony in a defamation court case, a butler, Renaldo Rizzo, who worked for billionaires Eva Dubin and Glenn Dubin, alleged:


“She (a 15-year-old girl) just lets it rip, and what she told me was unbelievable,” Rizzo testified. “She proceeded to tell my wife and I… ‘I was on the island and there was Ghislaine, and there was Sarah (Kellen),’ and she said, ‘They asked me for sex. I said no.’”

Rizzo later clarified, “She didn’t specify who asked for sex. She said they asked for sex.” 

Rizzo testified that when she refused to have sex, Kellen took her phone and passport and gave them to Maxwell.

“And at that point, she said she was threatened,” Rizzo testified.


In her latest personal reinvention, it looks as though Sarah is claiming she’s a cult victim. Sarah stated in 2019 she was abused by Jeffrey Epstein but now her excuse may include cult victimisation.


We found some new information recently concerning the alleged Jeffrey Epstein coconspirator via her husband’s website. It may show her defence has taken on this new mind control element.


The allegations against Sarah are grave, shocking and extremely serious.


 

Above: Civil court allegations against Groff & Kellen

Kellen watched thousands of girls walk up those Palm Beach mansion stairs to be abused by Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.

Police were very close to charging her in the early 2000s (see below). imageSarah married Brian Vickers, an ex-NASCAR driver in 2013.

According to Maxim, Vickers was described as partaking in a “relentless, connoisseur’s pursuit of pussy in all its forms.” 


When the story was published in February 2011, it became the buzz of the NASCAR world. At the time, Vickers’ friends seemed to think the story sounded like an accurate portrayal, according to SBNation.
“I know that Brian, definitely,” close friend Jimmie Johnson said at the time. “With a year off, I think he pursued as many things off track as possible and certainly had a lot of fun. … Brian has always had an interesting point of view on things. He has never lacked confidence, either. I felt like that came through in the article.”
But in a little-noticed blog post in April 2011, Vickers wrote the Maxim article was “loosely based on a true story.”

Find out more about the other female players in this filthy Epstein quagmire in this post and the below podcasts and video.

The Group of Women Who Served Epstein

Video: The Women Who Served Epstein

The Ring of Women Behind Epstein

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