Explosive emails between Soon-Yi Previn and convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein have just been unsealed, revealing shocking victim-blaming and #MeToo criticism from Woody Allen's wife.
The newly released documents—part of the massive Epstein Files Transparency Act dump—show Previn not only mocking the #MeToo movement but placing blame on a 15-year-old victim in Anthony Weiner's sexting scandal.
In a January 2018 email, Previn forwarded Epstein a message she'd written to herself with the jaw-dropping subject line: "Just as the Me Too movement has gone too far so has Botox."

Woody Allen and Soon-Yi Previn in New York City in October 2025. Bruce Glikas/WireImage
But the most disturbing revelation comes from her commentary on Weiner's 15-year-old victim: "I hate women who take advantage of guys and she is definitely one of them. She knew exactly what she was doing and how vulnerable Wiener was and she reeled him in like fish to bait."
Previn doubled down, writing: "We know he's sick but she's also sick to have done this to him. So manipulative on her part. She should be ashamed of herself."
The emails provide chilling insight into Previn's mindset as she maintained correspondence with Epstein—who was already a convicted sex offender by 2018. Previn, adopted by Mia Farrow in 1978, began her controversial relationship with Allen when she was in her early 20s and he was in his 50s.
This revelation comes against the backdrop of Dylan Farrow's longstanding sexual abuse allegations against Allen—claims Previn has consistently dismissed. In the 2021 documentary Allen v. Farrow, Dylan detailed her allegations publicly for the first time, while Allen has repeatedly denied them.
Allen himself described Epstein as "charming and personable" in a 2025 interview, noting they attended dinners with "illustrious people" at Epstein's home but never saw him with underage girls.
These emails raise urgent questions about what Previn knew, when she knew it, and why she maintained contact with one of history's most notorious predators while blaming teenage victims.