Episodios

  • Mega Edition: Judge Rakoff Makes A Ruling In The Survivors Suit Against USVI (Part 1-2) (4/15/26)
    Apr 15 2026
    Judge Jed Rakoff approved a $290 million settlement between JPMorgan Chase and Jeffrey Epstein's victims, emphasizing that the case sent a strong message to the financial industry about the responsibilities of banking institutions. The settlement, which did not require JPMorgan to admit liability, resolved claims that the bank ignored red flags to maintain Epstein as a client, benefiting from his illegal activities from 1998 to 2013.

    The approval came after a last-minute challenge from 16 state attorneys general who objected to a clause in the settlement that prevented future claims by any "sovereign or government" on behalf of the victims. They argued that this could hinder future cases against sex trafficking perpetrators. However, Rakoff found the settlement terms clear and justified, dismissing the objections.

    The settlement also included a provision for the lawyers to receive 30% of the settlement amount in fees, which the judge deemed fair given the significant recovery for the plaintiffs. This settlement follows a similar case where Deutsche Bank agreed to pay $75 million to settle claims related to Epstein without admitting wrongdoing.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    gov.uscourts.nysd.591653.130.0_1.pdf (courtlistener.com)
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    25 m
  • Sky Roberts And His Interview With The Daily Mail
    Apr 15 2026
    Sky Roberts described how he personally drove his pickup truck to the house of Jeffrey Epstein to meet him and Ghislaine Maxwell after his then-teenage daughter Virginia Giuffre was offered a job as a masseuse. He said Epstein seemed like “a regular guy” and Maxwell appeared friendly — nothing that suggested to him the abuse that would later come to light. Roberts said he believed at the time he was simply doing his parental duty by checking out the job offer his daughter accepted, and insisted he had no clue Epstein was a pedophile or that his daughter would be exploited. According to him, Virginia “never came home from trips and said, ‘I’ve been sexually abused’” — and because she never described it to him, he remained completely unaware of what was really happening.


    In later public remarks, Roberts reaffirmed that he believed his daughter’s allegations were real. He backed the authenticity of a widely circulated photograph showing Giuffre with Epstein’s associates, saying she had shown him the original years before she went public — meaning it wasn’t doctored. He called Epstein and Maxwell “despicable,” condemning how they abused wealth and power to prey on vulnerable young women. He also criticized those — including powerful men — whom he feels escaped real accountability.



    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    21 m
  • The Queen Warns The Press About Taking Pictures At Balmoral
    Apr 15 2026
    According to news reports, lawyers working for Queen Elizabeth II sent letters to major British newspapers warning them against taking or publishing photographs of the royal family and their guests at the Balmoral Castle estate. The letters emphasized that Balmoral is a private residence and that when royals and their guests are staying there, they have a “reasonable expectation of privacy.” The warning was issued on the same day that Prince Andrew reportedly arrived at the estate.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    23 m
  • The Warden In Charge Of MCC When Epstein Died Quietly Retires
    Apr 15 2026
    The Warden who was overseeing the MCC at the time of Jeffrey Epstein's death and who had quietly been moved to a different facility, has retired as the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein's death continues to go on.


    (commercial at 9:20)

    To contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    https://apnews.com/article/prisons-new-jersey-jeffrey-epstein-04a7c866c49d15a32ddc6f57fe18dca1
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    16 m
  • Bill Barr Discusses Epstein's Death In His Book
    Apr 14 2026
    On tonight's edition of the evening update, we hear from Bill Barr who is pushing his new book. In the book, he discusses Epstein's death and what led up to it and how he has seen the footage that puts to bed any thoughts of Epstein's death being a suicide or if he was killed. The question is, will the public ever have access to this video? Somehow, I doubt it.


    (Commercial at 10:31)

    To contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/crime/trump-barr-epstein-surveillance-video-b2027697.html
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    17 m
  • Inside The OIG Interview: The Warden's Statement Detailing The Death Of Jeffrey Epstein (Part 10) (4/14/26)
    Apr 14 2026
    Lamine N'Diaye, in his interview with the Office of the Inspector General, essentially tried to turn the Metropolitan Correctional Center into a scapegoat while positioning himself as a bystander to its failures. He leaned heavily on the narrative that the facility was already broken—staff shortages, overtime abuse, infrastructure decay—as if that somehow absolved him of responsibility rather than underscoring the urgency of his role. What stands out is not just what he admitted, but what he avoided: there is little evidence in his account of decisive leadership, no clear record of aggressive intervention, and no meaningful acknowledgment that the buck was supposed to stop with him. Instead, he described a system failing in slow motion while he remained at the helm, fully aware of the cracks but unwilling—or unable—to reinforce them before they gave way.

    Even more troubling is how his interview reflects a pattern of deflection that mirrors broader institutional behavior in the wake of Jeffrey Epstein’s death. N’Diaye pointed to correctional officers missing rounds, falsifying logs, and working under extreme fatigue, but failed to explain why those conditions were tolerated under his command, especially after Epstein had already been flagged as a high-risk inmate following a prior incident. The responsibility didn’t disappear into the system—it sat squarely in his office, and his testimony reads less like accountability and more like damage control. The overall picture is not of a warden overwhelmed by circumstances, but of a leader who allowed a known crisis environment to persist unchecked, then attempted to retroactively frame it as inevitable once the worst-case scenario unfolded.



    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00119019.pdf
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    16 m
  • James Comer "Fast-Tracks" Epstein Hearings After Melania’s Statement (4/14/26)
    Apr 14 2026
    Melania Trump’s public denial of any connection to Jeffrey Epstein, coupled with her call for victims to testify, has injected fresh momentum into congressional efforts to hold hearings, with House Oversight Chairman James Comer confirming that proceedings involving alleged victims are moving forward. But the timing and framing of her remarks invite skepticism. After years of political minimization and narrative control around Epstein, her sudden push to spotlight victim testimony can be read less as a principled stand and more as a preemptive move—an attempt to get ahead of whatever information may still be looming in unreleased files. Calling for victims to speak publicly, while seemingly supportive, also conveniently redirects attention away from those in power and onto those who have already borne the brunt of the scandal.

    At the same time, Comer’s response raises its own red flags. His eagerness to lean into public hearings centered on victim testimony risks turning the process into a highly visible but ultimately shallow exercise. Rather than aggressively pursuing institutional accountability—through subpoenas, enforcement actions, or sustained pressure on agencies like the Department of Justice—the focus on televised testimony can come across as political theater designed to project action without necessarily delivering consequences. Taken together, both Melania’s intervention and Comer’s follow-through create the impression of a carefully managed narrative: one that amplifies outrage and visibility while sidestepping the far more uncomfortable task of confronting the systems and individuals that allowed Epstein’s network to operate in the first place.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Jeffrey Epstein victims to get House committee hearing: Comer
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    11 m
  • Why the DOJ Can No Longer Ignore the Fallout From Melania Trump’s Epstein Denial (4/14/26)
    Apr 14 2026
    Melania Trump’s recent remarks denying any connection to Jeffrey Epstein have intensified pressure on the Department of Justice, particularly on acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, to take more decisive action in the ongoing Epstein investigation. In her statement, Melania forcefully rejected allegations linking her to Epstein and framed them as politically motivated smears, while also calling for greater transparency and urging that victims be given a platform to testify publicly. Her comments sparked reactions across the political spectrum, with some lawmakers echoing her demand for accountability and suggesting that responsibility now falls on the DOJ—not Congress—to pursue prosecutions and fully address the scope of Epstein’s network.

    The fallout from her remarks has amplified scrutiny on Blanche and the Justice Department’s handling of the Epstein files, with critics arguing that more aggressive investigative and prosecutorial steps are needed. Some lawmakers publicly questioned why the DOJ has not moved faster or more forcefully, pointing to Melania’s call for victim testimony as something that should already be central to federal action. The situation has effectively shifted the spotlight onto the DOJ’s performance, with growing expectations that Blanche will demonstrate tangible progress in uncovering the full extent of Epstein-related wrongdoing and ensuring accountability at higher levels.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Melania Trump's Epstein call turns up heat on Justice Department and its new leader | Fox News
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    15 m