A U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) intake record details a 2020 phone report from a UK-based model who said she believed Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell may have attempted to target her as a potential trafficking victim in 2007. The account appears in unclassified FBI intake documentation released as part of broader DOJ disclosures tied to the Epstein investigation.
According to the intake summary, the caller contacted the FBI’s National Threat Operations Center (NTOC) from Cambridge, United Kingdom, to provide what she described as “significant” information related to the Epstein and Maxwell case. The document records her recollection of several encounters she considered suspicious at the time and later connected to media coverage of the Epstein network.
2007 London Modelling Event Encounter
The DOJ intake notes that in 2007 the caller was introduced by mutual acquaintances to a New York photographer identified as Eliot Siegel, who invited her to attend a modelling event at London’s O2 Arena for a test shoot. The report states she attended and later realized the event involved S&M-themed modelling.
While there, she described an interaction in which Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell allegedly approached and looked at her without speaking. The intake record says she declined a modelling offer made by another photographer at the event and left shortly afterwards, describing the situation as unsettling.


The same DOJ document summarizes a second episode occurring roughly a month later. The caller reported being contacted online by a man based in Miami, Florida, whom she initially found attractive and communicated with regularly. During video chats, she said she noticed what appeared to be another man standing behind him and “coaching” him on what to say, despite there being no audio.
The intake record states the man became insistent about persuading her to travel to Florida to meet him. She ultimately blocked further contact. Years later, according to the document, she came across news articles and believed the individual resembled or was identified as Scott Borgerson. The intake reflects her personal belief; it does not state that law enforcement confirmed the identification.
2020 FBI Call and Reference to Prince William
An NTOC intake record, later released by the DOJ, records that the caller contacted the FBI in August 2020 after reading renewed media coverage about Jeffrey Epstein and his associates. She told investigators she believed her earlier encounters linked to trafficking activity associated with Epstein and Maxwell. The document also records that she said she met Prince William in England during the same period and personally believed that meeting might also be connected. The intake clearly frames this as her personal belief, not a verified investigative conclusion or corroborated link.
The timeline referenced in her statement points back to 2007, the same year Prince William and Kate Middleton publicly ended their relationship, a split widely reported at the time by major outlets, including The Guardian. They would later reconcile. The DOJ record itself does not draw conclusions from that context; it simply documents what the caller said during her report.
Additional DOJ-Released Communications
Separate DOJ-released materials also contain unrelated communications in which Prince William’s name appears only in passing. One email from Lesley Groff, Jeffrey Epstein’s executive assistant, refers to a journalist who was asking questions about Epstein and expressed interest in speaking with several associates, including Prince William.

Another email shows Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, a Dubai-based business executive, informing Jeffrey Epstein that he had attended a function with Prince William. Separate public reporting later indicates that DP World, the company bin Sulayem leads, announced £1 million in funding to Prince William’s Earthshot Prize, and campaign groups subsequently filed a complaint with the UK Charity Commission citing the surfaced Epstein correspondence. Disclosures also show that Epstein previously donated to the wildlife conservation charity WildAid, where Prince William served as an ambassador at the time. These references document emails, donations, and ambassador roles rather than investigative findings or determinations of wrongdoing.
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Nature of the Records
The FBI intake and associated emails are presented in DOJ disclosures as unclassified records. Intake reports document what a caller or witness says at the time of contact and do not, on their own, confirm the accuracy of the claims. The materials show what information was provided to authorities, not the outcome of any verification process.
All references above derive from DOJ-released documents and FBI intake summaries connected to the broader Epstein case file releases.
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