Actions speak louder than words.

President Trump has not said much about the arrest of his former friend Jeffrey Epstein, but court documents suggest that he made his opinion of the convicted pedophile well known years ago.

An ongoing lawsuit between Epstein and Bradley Edwards, who represented multiple underage victims in their civil suits against the convicted pedophile, reveals that President Trump banned Epstein from his private club in Palm Beach, Mar-a-Lago.

The reason for that, according to the filing, was that Epstein had 'sexually assaulted an underage girl at the club.'

That same filing also claims that Epstein and his girlfriend-turned-platonic companion Ghislaine Maxwell used the club as a hunting ground for new girls.

President Trump finally commented on Epstein's arrest Tuesday afternoon while speaking to the media at the White House, saying: 'I had a falling out with him a long time ago. I wasn’t a fan. I was not a fan of his. That I can tell you.'

He went on to refer to Epstein as a 'fixture in Palm Beach.'

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Double date: A court filing submitted in an ongoing lawsuit between Jeffrey Epstein and a lawyer for his victims states that he was banned from Mar-a-Lago (Trumps with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago in 2000)

Filing: President Trump allegedly issued this ban after he learned that Epstein had sexually assaulted an underage girl (above)

These revelations came out in a bid by Edwards to depose President Trump in the case.

In addition to the ban from Mar-a-Lago and his recruitment of a minor female from the club, there were a number of other ties linking Epstein to President Trump outlined in the filings.

They included Epstein's brother Mark testifying under oath 'that Trump flew on Jeffrey Epstein’s plane with him'; the fact that President Trump had been to Epstein’s home in Palm Beach;and the fact that 'Epstein’s phone directory from his computer contains 14 phone numbers for Donald Trump, including emergency numbers, car numbers, and numbers to Trump’s security guard and houseman.'

Edwards wrote that based on this he was of the belief that 'Trump might have relevant information to provide in the cases against Jeffrey Epstein.'

In the end, President Trump was not deposed, and the recent arrest of Epstein will likely further delay this trial, which has spent 10 years making it through the courts.

It is unclear when Epstein was banned, but it was not until years after he and Maxwell allegedly recruited their first young woman at the club.

That woman was known as Jane Doe 2 in court filings.

A Jane Doe 3, later revealed to be Virginia Roberts Giuffre, was also working at Mar-a-Lago when she was recruited according to court documents.

She was just 15 when she was approached by Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago, which was her summer job at the time.

A number of people have been critical of President Trump for not commenting on Epstein's arrest given their once close friendship (above in 1997 at Mar-a-Lago)

Roberts, now a 35-year-old mother-of-three, claimed she was then passed around among Epstein's friends for underage sex.

Epstein has entered a not guilty plea to two charges of sex trafficking in federal court that could put him behind bars for 45 years.

The disgraced billionaire, 66, appeared in federal court for the first time on Monday, where he entered in a dark blue jumpsuit and took his seat next to his defense attorney for the first of two hearings in his case.

His arrival came hours after prosecutors unveiled what they had uncovered from Epstein's house after they raided his mansion on Saturday night, turning up thousands of graphic photos which included images of underage girls.

Agents also found Epstein's massage room set up just as victims described it from 15 years ago, with a table and assortment of sex toys.

At one point during the proceedings, Epstein's lawyer Reid Weingarten compared the victims who previously accused his client of sexual assault to sex workers.

'It is fair to say that a significant segment of the law enforcement community in Florida thought that what we had was simple prostitution,' stated Weingarten.

He made this comments as two of those women, victims Michelle Licata and Courtney Wild, sat just few feet away in the courtroom.

Licata was 16 when she claims Epstein assaulted her, while Wild was 14.

He later referred to the allegations involving Epstein as being 'ancient conduct.' When the judge pointed out that the victims' being underage would make the allegations a crime regardless, Weingarten responded: 'There's no statutory rape because there was no penetration.'

Day in court: Epstein entered a not guilty plea to charges of sex trafficking on Monday in federal court, for his alleged sexual abuse of three minors (l to r: Martin Weinberg, Epstein, and Marc Fernich)

Defense: 'It is fair to say that a significant segment of the law enforcement community in Florida thought that what we had was simple prostitution,' stated Weingarten (victims Michelle Licata and Courtney Wild above on Monday outside court)

The allegations are piling up though, with the US Attorney's office revealing that they have received multiple calls from witnesses that had yet to be interviewed in the case in the 36 hours since Epstein's arrest.

In addition, any victims of Epstein in New York will have the right to file a civil claim against him in the state anytime before August 14, 2020 - even if the statute of limitations has expired in the case.

Federal prosecutors informed the court though that they 'don't expect any imminent superseding indictments in this case.'

Epstein and Weingarten ultimate opted to delay his bail hearing, asking for three more days to prepare arguments against the bail memorandum filed by federal prosecutors.

It was then ordered by the judge that the request for bail be submitted on Thursday and prosecutors turn in their response on Friday ahead of a hearing next Monday when he would rule on the matter.

Epstein entered his plea just hours after it was revealed that an 'extraordinary volume of photographs of nude and partially-nude young women or girls' was discovered by agents over the weekend during their search of Epstein's Manhattan mansion.

Federal prosecutors also detailed some of the other evidence discovered inside the home in the bail memorandum, which asks that Epstein remain in prison ahead of trial.

That listed 'documents and other materials, such as contemporaneous notes, messages recovered from the defendant’s residence that include names and contact information for certain victims, and call records that confirm the defendant and his agents were repeatedly in contact with various victims during the charged period. '

Meanwhile, the search uncovered 'at least hundreds—and perhaps thousands—of sexually suggestive photographs of fully- or partially nude females.'

A number of those photographs 'appear to be of underage girls, including at least one girl who, according to her counsel, was underage at the time the relevant photographs were taken.'

It is also noted that some photos were discovered in a locked safe, where agents 'also found compact discs with hand-written labels including the following: "Young [Name] + [Name]," "Misc nudes 1," and "Girl pics nude."'

The indictment against the billionaire pedophile was unsealed on Monday morning, and states that Epstein 'enticed and recruited, and caused to be enticed and recruited, minor girls at his mansion in Manhattan and his estate in Palm Beach to engage in sex acts with him.'

There were dozens of these underage girls according to the indictment, who would receive hundreds of dollars after being forced into sex acts or, as the indictment states, finding others to engage ins ex acts with Epstein.

'Moreover, in order to maintain and increase his supply of victims, Epstein also paid certain of his victims to recruit additional girls to be similarly abused by Epstein, reads the court filing.

'In this way, Epstein created a vast network of underage victims for him to sexually exploit.'