“Literally Demonic” — Joe Rogan Horrified After Reading Epstein Files: Naomi Campbell Named Nearly 300 Times

The internet has not stopped shaking since February 2026. That was the month the Department of Justice finally released over 3.5 million pages, 180,000 images, and 2,000 videos from the Jeffrey Epstein investigation — the largest document dump in modern American history.

While millions scrambled to search for celebrity names, one of the most influential voices on the planet sat down, read the files, and delivered a reaction that sent chills through anyone paying attention.

Joe Rogan wasn’t scared because his own name appeared. He was scared because of what he saw when he kept reading.

“I’m in the files for not going,” Rogan said on his podcast, recalling how a physicist guest tried to connect him with Epstein back in 2017.

Rogan did what any cautious person would do — he Googled the name, saw the 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor, and immediately shut it down.

That single decision kept his name clean. But as he dug deeper into the massive file release, Rogan’s tone shifted from casual to genuinely disturbed.

“This is the one that I hate the most because this one scares the hell out of me,” he said.

“Literally demonic human beings that are running the world and don’t give a fuck about human lives… enjoy watching people being tortured, enjoy watching people killed, participating in ritual sacrifice.”

Rogan wasn’t talking only about Epstein. He was talking about the people above him — the protected names, the redacted identities, the billionaire network that treated Epstein as a middleman rather than the mastermind.

And right in the middle of that storm sits one of the most recognizable women on Earth: Naomi Campbell.

Her name appears nearly 300 times across the files. Emails, flight logs, dinner party guest lists, victim testimony — the evidence paints a picture of a relationship that lasted more than 15 years, continuing long after Epstein’s conviction and sex-offender registration.

This wasn’t a casual acquaintance. This was someone deeply embedded in Epstein’s world. Court documents show Campbell repeatedly requested rides on Epstein’s private jet.

She coordinated visits to his New York mansion through his personal assistant, Lesley Groff. Staff even tracked her personal schedule — down to facial appointments — so they could arrange calls.

One 2010 email from Campbell herself reads: “I want to see Jeffrey,” signed “Exhausted babes.”

This was seven years after Epstein’s conviction. The most disturbing communication may be the one from Ghislaine Maxwell.

The woman now serving 20 years for child sex trafficking emailed Campbell directly, offering her “two playmates.”

In the context of Maxwell’s operation, the meaning is unmistakable. Campbell has never adequately explained that email.

Then there is the haunting night of May 31, 2001 — Naomi Campbell’s 31st birthday party aboard a luxury yacht off San Remo, Italy.

Among the elite guests in designer gowns stood a single out-of-place figure: 17-year-old Virginia Giuffre, wearing a pink tank top.

Virginia later described feeling invisible and used that night. She stated under oath that Naomi Campbell was Ghislaine Maxwell’s best friend and “there is no way she did not know what was happening.”

Photographs from the event show Campbell looking directly at the teenager. Virginia Giuffre spent the next two decades fighting for justice.

She named names, filed lawsuits, and wrote a memoir titled Nobody’s Girl, published after her tragic death by suicide in April 2025 at age 41.

In it, she revisited that birthday party and the pink tank top that made her feel so exposed.

Virginia is gone. Many of the people she accused remain protected, successful, and untouched. The timeline only gets more damning.

In 2008, Epstein was convicted and registered as a sex offender. Yet in 2009, just months after his release, Campbell attended dinner at his mansion alongside Prince Andrew.

In 2010, she joined Epstein on a private Nile boat trip. She invited the convicted predator to her own charity events and fashion parties.

As late as 2016 — eight years after his conviction — Campbell was desperately calling Epstein’s office multiple times in one day because she needed his plane and had “no backup plan.”

Epstein even weaponized Campbell’s fame. FBI transcripts reveal he used her name as bait while recruiting underage girls, promising them Victoria’s Secret careers and connections to the supermodel.

The fashion industry itself appears deeply compromised. Epstein’s primary financial backer, Leslie Wexner, granted him power of attorney and gifted him a $77 million mansion where many abuses allegedly occurred — a mansion Campbell visited for dinner parties.

When the files dropped, Rogan connected the dots in real time. He spoke about the psychology that keeps these networks alive: powerful people surrounding themselves with respected names to create an illusion of legitimacy.

“You figure if that guy’s there, that lady’s there… this is fine,” he explained. Naomi Campbell’s decades-long orbit fits that pattern perfectly.

Her past adds another layer. Campbell has four separate assault convictions. She was accused of lying under oath at the International Criminal Court in The Hague regarding blood diamonds from warlord Charles Taylor.

She publicly celebrated Sean “Diddy” Combs shortly before major allegations against him surfaced, only to quietly delete the posts afterward.

This is not a story about one fallen celebrity. It is about a system that protected predators while victims like Virginia Giuffre paid the ultimate price.

The DOJ files still have roughly two million pages withheld. Key names remain heavily redacted, including powerful figures whose connections go far beyond Epstein.

Rogan’s fear wasn’t paranoia — it was recognition that the real power structure remains untouched.

Naomi Campbell has issued vague statements claiming she “stands with the victims” and that she is “a work in progress.”

But the documents tell a different story: 15 years of closeness, hundreds of mentions, and zero full public accounting.

As Rogan warned, the people at the very top — the ones financing, protecting, and benefiting from Epstein — are still walking free.

They live in the same mansions, attend the same parties, and maintain the same influence.

Naomi Campbell, whether willingly or not, sat at the center of that web for years.

The question now echoing across the internet is simple and terrifying: If Naomi Campbell truly decides to talk — not with carefully worded PR statements, but with complete honesty about the rooms she entered, the people she met, and the things she witnessed — how many more dominoes will fall?

Virginia Giuffre fought until her last breath. The files are now public. The world is watching.

The silence that protected this network for decades is cracking. Joe Rogan saw it. Millions who read the files see it.

The only question left is whether the rest of us will demand the full truth — no matter whose names appear.

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