Episodios

  • Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Brother Mark's Comments Post Epstein's Death (2/12/26)
    Feb 12 2026
    Mark Epstein has repeatedly stated that he believes his brother, Jeffrey Epstein, was murdered and that the official narrative surrounding his death is deeply flawed. From the outset, Mark Epstein has questioned how a high-profile detainee on suicide watch could die under such extraordinary lapses in supervision, pointing to broken cameras, missing or incomplete footage, falsified or contradictory guard records, and shifting explanations from authorities. He has argued that these failures were not merely bureaucratic incompetence but systemic breakdowns so severe that they warrant suspicion of foul play rather than acceptance of a simple suicide conclusion.


    Beyond the circumstances of the death itself, Mark Epstein has also challenged the broader story told about his brother’s final days and legal exposure. He has said Jeffrey Epstein was in relatively good spirits, actively planning legal strategies, and expecting to pursue bail—conditions that, in his view, conflict with the portrayal of a man on the brink of suicide. Mark Epstein has further criticized the rush by officials to close the case, the absence of a transparent and adversarial investigation, and the reluctance to fully examine who benefited from Epstein’s death. Taken together, his claims amount to a direct rejection of the official account, asserting that the public has been given a simplified and misleading version of events that fails to explain glaring inconsistencies and unresolved questions.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    45 m
  • Mega Edition: Dan Bongino Talked A Big Game Only To Fold When It Was Time To Produce (2/12/26)
    Feb 12 2026
    For years, Dan Bongino built a reputation around loud, emphatic promises that he possessed explosive knowledge about Jeffrey Epstein, repeatedly telling audiences that the truth would eventually come out and that he knew where the bodies were buried. He positioned himself as someone with insider awareness, hinting at catastrophic revelations and suggesting that accountability was imminent if only the public waited. These claims helped drive attention, engagement, and credibility among listeners who believed Bongino was uniquely informed and prepared to expose powerful figures tied to Epstein’s crimes.

    In practice, however, those promises never materialized into concrete disclosures, documented evidence, or meaningful breakthroughs. Despite years of rhetoric, Bongino failed to deliver names, records, or verifiable reporting that advanced public understanding of the Epstein network beyond what was already known through court filings, investigative journalism, and victim testimony. As more primary documents have since emerged through litigation and records releases—without Bongino’s involvement—his earlier bravado has aged poorly, exposing a gap between his public posture and actual results. What remains is a case study in performative outrage: big talk that generated attention, but ultimately produced no accountability, no new facts, and no tangible contribution to unraveling the Epstein operation.


    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    46 m
  • Mega Edition: Julie K. Brown Puts The USVI On Blast Over Their Epstein Hypocrisy (2/11/26)
    Feb 12 2026
    Julie K. Brown, the investigative reporter for the Miami Herald, not only reignited the Jeffrey Epstein case by exposing the sweetheart non-prosecution agreement in Florida but also turned her spotlight to Epstein’s Caribbean operations. In a 2023 Miami Herald piece titled “U.S. Virgin Islands cozied up to Jeffrey Epstein. Now they’re profiting from his sex crimes,” Brown detailed how Epstein benefited from deep ties to the territory’s institutions—securing lavish tax breaks and beneficial financial dealings through shell companies like Southern Trust. Her reporting underscored how USVI authorities, including those in positions of power, either overlooked or enabled Epstein’s operations, which later came under legal scrutiny through lawsuits and settlements.

    In the piece, Brown argued that the USVI not only allowed Epstein to operate with little interference but later positioned itself to collect financial benefits through penalties and settlements after his death. This framing suggested that the government was both complicit in allowing the criminal enterprise to flourish and opportunistic in profiting from its collapse. The article sparked strong pushback, including from the University of the Virgin Islands, which issued a public response disputing some of the claims. The controversy reflected the tension between investigative reporting that sought to highlight systemic failures and local institutions that rejected the characterization of their role.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    U.S. Virgin Islands profiting from Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes | Miami Herald
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    50 m
  • In Their Own Words: "MJ" Doe 's Allegations Made Against Jeffrey Epstein (Part 4)
    Feb 12 2026
    The document MJ v. Jeffrey Epstein, Case No. 9:10-cv-81111-WPD, filed on September 17, 2010 in the Southern District of Florida, involves a civil lawsuit brought by a plaintiff identified as “MJ” against Jeffrey Epstein. According to publicly available summaries of this and similar filings from the same time period, MJ was a minor at the time of the alleged abuse. The complaint accuses Epstein of sexually abusing and trafficking MJ while exploiting his wealth and power to silence and control her. MJ alleged that Epstein engaged in a pattern of recruiting underage girls under the guise of offering them money for massages, only for the encounters to turn sexually exploitative. The suit contends that Epstein used his Palm Beach residence as a base for this operation and that he was enabled by associates who helped him procure and manipulate the victims.

    The complaint further claims that Epstein committed multiple violations of federal and state laws, including sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violations of civil rights statutes protecting minors. MJ's legal team argued that the long-term psychological damage from Epstein’s abuse warranted significant compensatory and punitive damages. The case forms part of a broader group of lawsuits filed by various women against Epstein around that time, many of whom described nearly identical patterns of abuse. These cases contributed to the growing body of evidence surrounding Epstein’s trafficking network long before his 2019 arrest and death.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    gov.uscourts.flsd.365238.1.0.pdf
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    19 m
  • In Their Own Words: "MJ" Doe 's Allegations Made Against Jeffrey Epstein (Part 3)
    Feb 12 2026
    The document MJ v. Jeffrey Epstein, Case No. 9:10-cv-81111-WPD, filed on September 17, 2010 in the Southern District of Florida, involves a civil lawsuit brought by a plaintiff identified as “MJ” against Jeffrey Epstein. According to publicly available summaries of this and similar filings from the same time period, MJ was a minor at the time of the alleged abuse. The complaint accuses Epstein of sexually abusing and trafficking MJ while exploiting his wealth and power to silence and control her. MJ alleged that Epstein engaged in a pattern of recruiting underage girls under the guise of offering them money for massages, only for the encounters to turn sexually exploitative. The suit contends that Epstein used his Palm Beach residence as a base for this operation and that he was enabled by associates who helped him procure and manipulate the victims.

    The complaint further claims that Epstein committed multiple violations of federal and state laws, including sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violations of civil rights statutes protecting minors. MJ's legal team argued that the long-term psychological damage from Epstein’s abuse warranted significant compensatory and punitive damages. The case forms part of a broader group of lawsuits filed by various women against Epstein around that time, many of whom described nearly identical patterns of abuse. These cases contributed to the growing body of evidence surrounding Epstein’s trafficking network long before his 2019 arrest and death.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    gov.uscourts.flsd.365238.1.0.pdf
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    13 m
  • In Their Own Words: "MJ" Doe 's Allegations Made Against Jeffrey Epstein (Part 2)
    Feb 12 2026
    The document MJ v. Jeffrey Epstein, Case No. 9:10-cv-81111-WPD, filed on September 17, 2010 in the Southern District of Florida, involves a civil lawsuit brought by a plaintiff identified as “MJ” against Jeffrey Epstein. According to publicly available summaries of this and similar filings from the same time period, MJ was a minor at the time of the alleged abuse. The complaint accuses Epstein of sexually abusing and trafficking MJ while exploiting his wealth and power to silence and control her. MJ alleged that Epstein engaged in a pattern of recruiting underage girls under the guise of offering them money for massages, only for the encounters to turn sexually exploitative. The suit contends that Epstein used his Palm Beach residence as a base for this operation and that he was enabled by associates who helped him procure and manipulate the victims.

    The complaint further claims that Epstein committed multiple violations of federal and state laws, including sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violations of civil rights statutes protecting minors. MJ's legal team argued that the long-term psychological damage from Epstein’s abuse warranted significant compensatory and punitive damages. The case forms part of a broader group of lawsuits filed by various women against Epstein around that time, many of whom described nearly identical patterns of abuse. These cases contributed to the growing body of evidence surrounding Epstein’s trafficking network long before his 2019 arrest and death.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    gov.uscourts.flsd.365238.1.0.pdf
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    14 m
  • In Their Own Words: "MJ" Doe 's Allegations Made Against Jeffrey Epstein (Part 1)
    Feb 11 2026
    The document MJ v. Jeffrey Epstein, Case No. 9:10-cv-81111-WPD, filed on September 17, 2010 in the Southern District of Florida, involves a civil lawsuit brought by a plaintiff identified as “MJ” against Jeffrey Epstein. According to publicly available summaries of this and similar filings from the same time period, MJ was a minor at the time of the alleged abuse. The complaint accuses Epstein of sexually abusing and trafficking MJ while exploiting his wealth and power to silence and control her. MJ alleged that Epstein engaged in a pattern of recruiting underage girls under the guise of offering them money for massages, only for the encounters to turn sexually exploitative. The suit contends that Epstein used his Palm Beach residence as a base for this operation and that he was enabled by associates who helped him procure and manipulate the victims.

    The complaint further claims that Epstein committed multiple violations of federal and state laws, including sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and violations of civil rights statutes protecting minors. MJ's legal team argued that the long-term psychological damage from Epstein’s abuse warranted significant compensatory and punitive damages. The case forms part of a broader group of lawsuits filed by various women against Epstein around that time, many of whom described nearly identical patterns of abuse. These cases contributed to the growing body of evidence surrounding Epstein’s trafficking network long before his 2019 arrest and death.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    gov.uscourts.flsd.365238.1.0.pdf
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    12 m
  • Epstein Investigations Abroad Move Forward as U.S. Accountability Freezes (Part 2) (2/11/26)
    Feb 11 2026
    Across the Atlantic, European nations have responded to the release of Jeffrey Epstein–related files with a comparatively aggressive and public reckoning over elite complicity. In the United Kingdom, Norway, Poland, and elsewhere, the fallout from the documents has triggered formal investigations, high-profile resignations, and political consequences for figures whose names surfaced in the records, even if their involvement was peripheral or social. British politicians and advisers have stepped down amid public scrutiny, and Norwegian elites connected to Epstein are under investigation, with some issuing apologies and cooperating with authorities. Poland’s government has launched its own probe after identifying possible Polish victims in the documents — a sign that European governments are treating the revelations as a matter of serious legal and moral accountability rather than political spin control. This has unfolded amid significant media coverage and public pressure that frames Epstein’s abuses and networks as a cross-border scandal requiring transparent and sober investigation — not just partisan talking points.

    In contrast, the United States’ political and institutional response has been markedly more cautious, politicized, and slow, drawing sharp criticism from lawmakers, survivors, and commentators. Despite enacting the Epstein Files Transparency Act to force the release of millions of pages of investigative documents, the Justice Department missed legal deadlines, issued heavily redacted material, and has only gradually rolled out portions of the files, leading critics to accuse it of protecting powerful figures and delaying justice. Congressional hearings have been stymied by Maxwell’s refusal to cooperate, with her attorney openly suggesting she might only testify in exchange for presidential clemency — a development that illustrates how accountability has been bogged down in political negotiation rather than pursued with urgency. Meanwhile, public opinion polls show overwhelming dissatisfaction with how the U.S. government has handled the disclosures and lingering suspicion that elites are being shielded. This contrast — Europe acting with visible political consequences and institutional scrutiny, and the U.S. dragging its feet amid partisan posturing and limited tangible accountability — underscores deep weaknesses in American mechanisms for confronting abuses tied to wealth and influence.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Analysis: New roadblocks slow US reckoning over Epstein as Europe races ahead | CNN Politics
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    19 m