NORTON META TAG

10 April 2026

Amanda Ungaro Arrived in the U.S. on Jeffrey Epstein's Plane at 17 — Now She's Going After Melania Trump From Brazil & Trump Friend Asked ICE to Detain the Mother of His Child 10APR&20MAR26

 

BREAKING: “Be careful with me, b*tch!” Melania’s Epstein scandal EXPLODES as former Brazilian model trafficked by Epstein, Amanda Ungaro, threatens legal action and airing of dirty laundry in wild Twitter spree!
Amanda Ungaro made the headlines a few weeks ago when it was revealed that Paolo Zampolli, the Epstein associate who reportedly introduced Trump to Melania, had collaborated with the Trump administration to have Ungaro, his former “girlfriend” and the mother of his child, deported after a vicious custody battle.
Ungaro was brought to the US on Epstein’s plane by his partner-in-pedophilia, Jean-Luc Brunel, when she was just 17 years old. Zampolli was the “modeling agent” for both Ungaro and Melania.
Now it seems Ungaro is out for revenge. Replying to old Melania tweets, Ungaro wrote 'I have nothing left to lose in my life. I will tear down the entire system—be careful with me b*tch,' she wrote. In a follow-up post, she added: “I will tear down your corrupt system, even if it's the last thing I do in my life. I will go all the way—I am not afraid…Maybe you should be afraid of what I know... of who you are, and who your husband is.”
In another post, she claimed she would “take legal action” against Melania and her “pedophile husband.”
“I have known you for 20 years. You knew I was detained in ICE. You were present in my life—every year on my son's birthday, even sending Secret Service and being the first to congratulate him, back in 2016.”
Wow. First of all, someone get this woman to safety. Secondly, ma’am, please go all the way. We would very much like to know what you know about who Donald Trump really is.
Because we have a pretty good idea, and if any of it is true, he needs to spend the rest of his life behind bars.


Amanda Ungaro Arrived in the U.S. on Jeffrey Epstein's Plane at 17 — Now She's Going After Melania Trump From Brazil


Olamide Oloro

On the same day First Lady Melania Trump stood in the White House Grand Foyer to deny any connection to Jeffrey Epstein, a series of posts from a woman named Amanda Ungaro started racking up hundreds of thousands of views on X.

The posts were direct replies to Melania's archived First Lady account. They were personal, combative, and specific. Ungaro claimed a relationship with the First Lady spanning two decades. She referenced being detained by ICE. She threatened legal action. One post pulled in over 300,000 views. Another topped 46,000.

The internet immediately wanted to know who she was.

The answer, as it turns out, connects Jeffrey Epstein, the man who introduced the Trumps, a senior ICE official, and a custody battle that ended in deportation.

A Teenager on Epstein's Plane

Amanda Ungaro is a Brazilian former model who arrived in the United States around 2002. She was 16 or 17 years old. According to a New York Times investigation and reporting corroborated by multiple outlets, she flew to New York on Jeffrey Epstein's private plane from Paris.

Her modeling agent at the time was Jean-Luc Brunel, who was later accused of procuring young women for Epstein. Brunel died in a French jail in 2022 while awaiting trial on charges of rape and sexual assault of minors.

Ungaro has been cited in recent discussions as a survivor of the Epstein network.

The Man Who Introduced the Trumps

In New York, Ungaro became the partner of Paolo Zampolli, an Italian-American modeling agent. Zampolli is the man who introduced Donald Trump to Melania Knauss in 1998 — a fact both the Trumps and Zampolli have publicly confirmed for years.

Zampolli and Ungaro were together for roughly two decades. They had a son. Both secured United Nations ambassadorships — Zampolli representing Dominica, Ungaro representing Grenada. They attended Donald Trump's first inauguration in 2017 and, according to reporting, sat at Melania's table during the dinner.

Getty Images has over 300 photos of Ungaro at diplomatic receptions, galas, and events alongside Zampolli, often in rooms that included figures from the Trump orbit. This was not someone on the margins.

Zampolli currently serves as Trump's special representative for global partnerships and sits on the board of the Kennedy Center.

How She Was Removed

The relationship between Zampolli and Ungaro ended bitterly. They separated permanently in 2021, and a custody battle over their teenage son followed.

In June 2025, Ungaro was arrested in Miami on fraud charges related to a medical spa. According to the New York Times, Zampolli saw an opportunity. He contacted David Venturella, a senior ICE official, and explained that his ex was in the country on a long-expired visa. During a call to ICE's Miami field office, Venturella noted the case was important to someone close to the White House. ICE agents picked Ungaro up before she could post bail. She was deported to Brazil.


Trump Friend Asked ICE to Detain the Mother of His Child


Paolo Zampolli, a former modeling agent and a longtime Trump ally, was in a custody battle over his son. An ICE official agreed to help.

Last June, the man credited with introducing President Trump to his wife asked the administration for a favor.

Paolo Zampolli, a former modeling agent turned presidential special envoy, had learned that his Brazilian ex-girlfriend was in a Miami jail, arrested on charges of fraud at her workplace. They had been in a custody battle over their teenage son. Now he saw an opportunity.

He reached out to a top official at Immigration and Customs Enforcement, explaining that his ex was in the country illegally, according to records obtained by The New York Times and a person familiar with the communications. Could she be put in ICE detention? That could help him get his son back.

The official, David Venturella, promptly called the agency’s Miami office to ensure that ICE agents would pick up the woman from the jail before she was released on bail, according to the records and a person with knowledge of the conversation who requested anonymity to discuss it. During the call, Mr. Venturella noted that the case was important to someone close to the White House.

The woman, Amanda Ungaro, was placed in ICE custody and ultimately deported, an outcome that may well have happened regardless of Mr. Zampolli’s meddling. But the ICE official’s willingness to spring into action for a Trump ally — even one in a low-level, largely ceremonial role — reflects a recurring theme of the second Trump administration: The levers of the federal government can be pulled to settle a personal score.


Mr. Zampolli, 56, is known in Washington for flaunting his proximity to the Trumps. In this case, he used his clout to solicit help from an agency beset by allegations of unlawful overreach.

In an interview with The Times, Mr. Zampolli denied asking ICE to detain Ms. Ungaro or seeking any other favors. He said he merely asked Mr. Venturella to explain what was going on with her case.

The Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE, said in a statement that Ms. Ungaro was detained and deported because she was on a long-expired visa and had been charged with fraud. “Any suggestion that she was arrested and removed for political reasons or favors is FALSE,” the statement said.

As the president’s special representative for global partnerships, Mr. Zampolli is a minor character in Mr. Trump’s Washington. But the role keeps him within photo-op range of the Trump family, cabinet secretaries and other prominent figures in and around the administration.


He throws parties at a sprawling D.C. townhouse where the walls are hung with pictures of him and the president, and an end table displays a copy of the first lady’s book, “Melania.”


His Instagram feed shows him trailing behind Mrs. Trump at the United Nations, standing beside Mr. Trump’s chief of staff and posing with his son-in-law Jared Kushner. “I am honored to have been a friend of the President for more than 30 years, a friend of the First Lady for 29 years,” reads one caption. It ends: “Loyalty is king.”

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Credit...no credit


Mr. Zampolli and Mr. Trump were fixtures of New York City nightlife in the 1990s and, as Mr. Zampolli told The Times a decade ago, shared a common interest: “We both like beautiful things.”


For years, the men have told the story of how, one night at the Kit Kat Club in 1998, Mr. Zampolli introduced Mr. Trump to Melania Knauss, a model he had recruited from Slovenia.


In the city’s modeling scene, Mr. Zampolli also intersected with Jeffrey Epstein, the financier who would later be accused of sexually abusing hundreds of girls and young women. The men once discussed buying a modeling agency together, and Mr. Zampolli’s name appears several times in the millions of Epstein documents recently released by the Justice Department. In one 2011 email, Mr. Epstein warned an Emirati businessman: “Be careful, zampoli is trouble. Lots.” He added, “He sells stories to the press.”

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Two couples standing in a store with shelves of handbags in the background.
The Trumps with Mr. Zampolli and another guest at a Dolce & Gabbana event in Manhattan in 2002.Credit...Thos Robinson/PMC

Mr. Zampolli told The Times in the recent interview that he did not have a close or warm relationship with Mr. Epstein, as shown by the fact that he appeared less frequently in the Epstein files than many other figures, including professors, monarchs and celebrities.

“At least I was included, because if you’re not on the list, you’re a loser, right?” he said.

Ms. Ungaro was a 17-year-old model when she arrived in New York for the first time in 2002, flying on Mr. Epstein’s plane from Paris with her French agent. She never saw Mr. Epstein again, she said in an interview. But later that year, she met Mr. Zampolli, then 32, at a Manhattan nightclub.

Mr. Zampolli wooed her as a client, she said, persuaded her to move to the United States and began a romantic relationship with her that would last two decades. Mr. Zampolli said this didn’t happen until Ms. Ungaro was 19.

They ascended into elite social circles, as Mr. Zampolli forged connections to former President Bill Clinton, the wealthy businessman Ron Burkle and other prominent figures.

But few of the relationships were as enduring as the one he had with the Trumps.

A black-tie event in a ballroom.
The Trumps with Amanda Ungaro and Mr. Zampolli at Mar-a-Lago on New Year’s Eve in 2021.

“I really miss to see both of you,” Mr. Zampolli wrote in a 2013 email to Mrs. Trump reviewed by The Times. “As you know Donald changed my life w/ u That night at dinner w/ Copperfild.” He was referring to an evening a decade earlier when, at a dinner with the illusionist David Copperfield, Mr. Trump had offered Mr. Zampolli a job in real estate.

The two couples remained friends, as Mr. Zampolli and Ms. Ungaro both secured ambassadorships to the United Nations, representing Dominica and Grenada. They would all sit together at New Year’s Eve parties at Mar-a-Lago, and Mrs. Trump would send birthday wishes and presents to their son.

But by 2023, she was fed up. Mr. Zampolli had made headlines for his boisterous parties filled with younger women, and for passing around explicit text messages between himself and a woman he claimed was a sex worker.

Ms. Ungaro left Mr. Zampolli, moved to Florida and married a doctor from Brazil. Their son went to boarding school and then lived with her, and the former couple fought over custody of him.

Then, last June, Ms. Ungaro and her husband were arrested.

The local police, prompted by anonymous tips, had been investigating the couple’s workplace: a medical spa where offerings included Botox and face lifts. Ms. Ungaro and her husband were charged with fraud, practicing medicine without a license and other crimes. They pleaded not guilty.

Ms. Ungaro’s husband held a green card and was quickly released from jail on bond. But she did not have the same legal status. For years, she told The Times, Mr. Zampolli had dangled the prospect of marriage — and the path to citizenship that comes with it — and then taken it back. She held a string of temporary visas, the last of which expired in 2019.

After her arrest, Mr. Zampolli began working his connections at ICE.

He sought help from Corey Lewandowski, then a top aide to the Homeland Security secretary, records show. He told The Times that Mr. Lewandowski did not respond to him. Mr. Lewandowski said he “never heard of that guy,” and the Homeland Security statement said he had “no involvement” in Ms. Ungaro’s case.

A man in a suit jacket speaking into a microphone.
David Venturella, an ICE official Mr. Zampolli contacted about his ex-girlfriend.Credit...Jenna Schoenefeld for The New York Times

Mr. Zampolli had better luck with Mr. Venturella. His back-channeling noted his relationships with the president and first lady, according to the records obtained by The Times and a person familiar with his communications. And he conveyed his belief that Ms. Ungaro’s detention would help him gain custody of their son.

Mr. Zampolli had better luck with Mr. Venturella. His back-channeling noted his relationships with the president and first lady, according to the records obtained by The Times and a person familiar with his communications. And he conveyed his belief that Ms. Ungaro’s detention would help him gain custody of their son.

Mr. Zampolli told the Times that he was not asking Mr. Venturella for a favor. “I asked David what was going on because I did not know the process,” he said.

Mr. Zampolli said that while he considered the Trumps close friends, and that they “were always there for me,” he did not recall whether he invoked their names or mentioned that Ms. Ungaro’s detainment would help him get his son.

A spokesman for Melania Trump said in a statement that the first lady “has no knowledge of, nor involvement in, the personal affairs of Mr. Zampolli and Ms. Ungaro.” He also said Mrs. Trump “has had no contact or engagement with” ICE.

After Mr. Venturella called the Miami office, Ms. Ungaro was placed in ICE custody. The local office kept Mr. Venturella updated on her status.

People familiar with the outreach said that, in all likelihood, it did not alter the trajectory of Ms. Ungaro’s case. She had already been flagged for detention.

But ICE officials have some discretion when deciding whom to detain, and the agency has specific guidance for cases that will affect minors. With detention centers in Florida and elsewhere stretched beyond capacity, some detainees have been released with ankle bracelets while their cases move through immigration court.

When The Times informed Ms. Ungaro that a senior ICE official had gotten involved in her case at the behest of Mr. Zampolli, she said she was appalled: “It’s devastating that they could have affected what happened to me.”

By September, she said, she had become convinced that if she remained at the detention center, she would lose custody of their son. So she asked the immigration judge to send her back to Brazil, which he did.

In November, the son asked to move to Brazil to live with Ms. Ungaro, and Mr. Zampolli agreed. But by the end of the year, the teenager decided to move back to the United States to live with his father. He remains there while his parents continue fighting in court.

Julie Tate contributed research.

Megan Twohey is an investigative reporter at The Times. Her work has prompted changes to the law, criminal convictions and cultural shifts.

Shawn McCreesh is a White House reporter for The Times covering the Trump administration.

Hamed Aleaziz covers the Department of Homeland Security and immigration policy for The Times.

A version of this article appears in print on March 21, 2026, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump Friend, in Custody Fight, Asked ICE to Hold Ex-Partner.







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