Episodios

  • Former Epstein Guard Tova Noel And The Lawsuit Filed Against Her By A Co-Worker
    Feb 26 2026
    Tova Noel, a former federal prison guard who was on duty when Jeffrey Epstein died in custody, is being sued by a female coworker at her new job in New York. According to the lawsuit, Noel allegedly punched and pulled the coworker’s ear during a confrontation at the medical office where they both work. The complaint claims that the assault occurred in front of other staff and that surveillance cameras were—conveniently—“not functioning” at the time, making it difficult to independently verify what happened.

    The plaintiff, who had been responsible for training Noel, was apparently terminated after filing the complaint with human resources. The suit seeks damages for alleged emotional distress, harm, and intimidation. Noel remains employed at that location as of the reporting.


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    11 m
  • MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 12) (2/26/26)
    Feb 26 2026
    Michael Thomas was a veteran correctional officer employed by the Federal Bureau of Prisons at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan — a federal detention facility — where Jeffrey Epstein was being held in the Special Housing Unit (SHU) while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges. Thomas had been with the Bureau of Prisons since about 2007 and, on the night of Epstein’s death (August 9–10, 2019), was assigned to an overnight shift alongside another officer, Tova Noel, responsible for conducting required 30-minute inmate checks and institutional counts in the SHU. Because Epstein’s cellmate had been moved and not replaced, Epstein was alone in his cell, making regular monitoring all the more crucial under bureau policy.

    Thomas became a focal figure in the official investigations into Epstein’s death because surveillance footage and institutional records showed that neither he nor Noel conducted the required rounds or counts through the night before Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell early on August 10. Prosecutors subsequently charged both officers with conspiracy and falsifying records for signing count slips that falsely indicated they had completed rounds they had not performed. Thomas and Noel later entered deferred prosecution agreements in which they admitted falsifying records and avoided prison time, instead receiving supervisory release and community service. Investigators concluded that chronic staffing shortages and procedural failures at the jail contributed to the circumstances that allowed Epstein to remain unmonitored for hours before his death, which was officially ruled a suicide by hanging.









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    source:

    EFTA00113577.pdf
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    13 m
  • Hillary Clinton Set To Be Deposed in Congressional Probe Tied to Jeffrey Epstein (2/26/26)
    Feb 26 2026
    Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is scheduled to be deposed today, February 26, 2026, by the Republican-led U.S. House Oversight Committee as part of its ongoing investigation into the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The closed-door deposition in Chappaqua, New York — near the Clintons’ home — is the first of two back-to-back hearings, with former President Bill Clinton set to testify tomorrow. The committee has pressed the Clintons for information on their past associations with Epstein, including Bill Clinton’s acknowledged flights on Epstein’s private jet and their appearances in Epstein-related documents released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act. Hillary Clinton has said she has little direct information to provide, denies wrongdoing, and has accused committee Republicans of pursuing a politically motivated process.


    The depositions follow months of tension between the Clintons and lawmakers, including threats to hold them in contempt of Congress for failing to comply with earlier subpoenas. Both Clintons initially resisted in-person testimony, offering written statements instead, before relenting to avoid a full contempt vote that could have led to legal consequences. Lawmakers from both parties on the Oversight Committee have said the sessions are meant to shed light on Epstein’s network of influence, the federal government’s handling of his prosecution, and unanswered questions about how Epstein avoided more serious charges after his 2008 conviction, although the proceedings are being conducted privately with transcripts and recordings expected to be released later.


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    source:

    Hillary Clinton faces House Oversight Committee in Epstein investigation grilling | Fox News
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    12 m
  • Bill Gates Admits Russian Affairs as Jeffrey Epstein Shadow Returns (2/26/26)
    Feb 26 2026
    In a February 2026 internal meeting with employees of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Bill Gates acknowledged that he had two extramarital affairs with Russian women during his marriage to Melinda French Gates. According to reports from The Wall Street Journal and others, Gates said one relationship was with a Russian bridge player he met at events and the other with a Russian nuclear physicist he encountered through business activities. He stressed that these affairs were unrelated to any of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims and that he never witnessed or took part in any illegal behavior.

    Gates framed his admissions as part of a broader apology for his past association with Epstein, which included meetings and travel together after Epstein’s 2008 conviction that Gates now calls “a huge mistake.” He told the staff that his interactions with Epstein, including involving foundation executives, had cast a shadow over the organization’s reputation and that he regretted the decisions. Gates maintained he had “done nothing illicit” while also taking responsibility for the personal and professional consequences of his choices


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Bill Gates admits he had two affairs with Russian women, apologizes for Epstein links
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    12 m
  • Epstein’s Secret Storage Units: Hard Drives, Video Tapes, and the Overlooked Evidence Trail (2/26/26)
    Feb 26 2026
    Newly revealed records show that Jeffrey Epstein rented multiple secret storage lockers in the U.S., including in Palm Beach, and filled them with a disturbing array of items that he apparently tried to hide from law enforcement. According to an inventory obtained by reporters, the units contained computers and hard drives, video tapes and DVDs with erotic content — including material’ said to sexualize teenagers — plus nude photographs believed to depict women connected to his circle. Sex-slave training manuals, dozens of address books, a three-page list of Florida masseuses, cash, and personal items such as women’s lingerie and sex toys were also catalogued in the stash.


    Investigators and critics say Epstein may have used private detectives to move these potentially incriminating materials from his homes to the storage units before police executed a 2005 raid on his Palm Beach mansion, suggesting he was tipped off ahead of time. Financial records show he leased at least six such lockers between 2003 and up through the year of his death in 2019. It remains unclear whether the FBI ever searched all of the units, meaning some contents could still be unexamined. The revelations emerged amid the broader release of millions of pages of files tied to Epstein’s activities, sparking renewed scrutiny of what evidence may still be hidden from authorities.


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Chilling contents of Epstein’s secret storage lockers revealed as paedo hid vid tapes & sex slave manuals away from cops
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    12 m
  • Stand Down: How the DOJ Sidelined NYPD in the Epstein Case (2/26/26)
    Feb 26 2026
    Newly released Department of Justice files and internal emails show that just **five days after Jeffrey Epstein was arrested on federal sex-trafficking charges in July 2019, federal authorities — including the FBI in coordination with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York — ordered the New York Police Department Special Victims Unit (SVU) to “stand down” its own investigations into Epstein and related matters. The directive reportedly came via outreach from the FBI to NYPD leadership, instructing that all Epstein-related investigative work from that point forward was to be handled through federal channels, effectively sidelining the NYPD’s specialized child exploitation investigators. At the time, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office also had its own parallel inquiry underway, but the communication suggested that any further NYPD actions should defer to federal leadership.

    Emails among federal agents indicated that the motivation for the stand-down order was concern about overlapping cases and the perception of “competing investigations,” particularly after the DA’s office reached out to a victim for interview amid the unfolding federal prosecution. The directive applied specifically to SVU — the unit trained to handle sex crimes and child abuse cases — and essentially shut out local detectives from pursuing additional leads or interviewing witnesses independently once Epstein was in federal custody. Internal discussions later suggested that NYPD’s Epstein inquiry was effectively closed or deferred to the FBI, limiting the department’s role despite its expertise in handling such cases. Epstein died in federal custody about a month later, ending the immediate criminal prosecution, though federal and local authorities continued to coordinate on related matters.


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    source:

    Revealed: FBI told NYPD to 'stand down' probe into Jeffrey Epstein - Alternet.org
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    12 m
  • Mega Edition: Prince Andrew's Strategy In The Lawsuit With Virginia Roberts Comes Under Fire (2/26/26)
    Feb 26 2026
    Virginia Roberts Giuffre filed a civil lawsuit in 2021 against Prince Andrew in federal court in New York, alleging that he sexually abused her on multiple occasions in 2001 when she was 17 years old and being trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. The complaint detailed encounters in London, New York, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and included the now-infamous photograph showing Andrew with his arm around her waist. Andrew repeatedly denied the allegations, most notably in his 2019 BBC interview, where he offered unusual explanations that drew widespread scrutiny. His legal team initially sought to have the case dismissed, challenging jurisdiction and the validity of Giuffre’s claims. However, a federal judge allowed the case to proceed, intensifying public and institutional pressure on the royal household. In February 2022, before the case went to trial, Andrew reached an out-of-court settlement with Giuffre without admitting liability, reportedly paying a substantial sum and agreeing to a statement expressing regret for his association with Epstein.

    Royal historians and constitutional commentators were sharply critical of Andrew’s handling of the crisis, arguing that his confrontational legal posture and the tone of his public denials deepened reputational damage to the monarchy. Many contended that the decision to grant the BBC interview was strategically disastrous, portraying him as evasive and detached rather than transparent. Others argued that his initial effort to fight the lawsuit aggressively in U.S. court clashed with long-standing royal traditions of restraint and discretion, prolonging the scandal instead of containing it. Critics suggested that by refusing early mediation and allowing the case to advance publicly, Andrew forced the institution into a defensive position that threatened broader stability for the royal family. Historians noted that the monarchy survives on public trust and symbolic integrity, and that Andrew’s legal strategy appeared to prioritize personal exoneration over institutional preservation. The eventual settlement, while closing the civil case, was widely viewed as a tacit acknowledgment that the strategy had failed to shield either his reputation or that of the Crown.


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    57 m
  • Mega Edition: How Jeffrey Epstein Doomed Lord Peter Mandelson From The Grave (2/26/26)
    Feb 26 2026
    In September 2025, Peter Mandelson — then the United Kingdom’s Ambassador to the United States — was dismissed (effectively recalled and fired) by Prime Minister Keir Starmer after revelations about his longstanding social relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein surfaced. Emails published earlier that year showed Mandelson had maintained contact with Epstein after Epstein’s 2008 conviction and had expressed supportive sentiments toward him, which diplomats said was far deeper than what had been known at the time of his appointment. Those communications raised questions about his judgment and suitability for the high-profile diplomatic post, prompting Starmer to remove him from the position immediately.

    In February 2026, the scandal escalated when authorities arrested Mandelson on 23 February on suspicion of misconduct in public office. This followed the release of internal documents and emails from the U.S. Department of Justice’s Epstein files suggesting he may have shared sensitive government information with Epstein during his time in government in 2009–10. As part of the fallout, Mandelson resigned from the House of Lords and the Labour Party, and British police executed search warrants at his residences as part of a criminal investigation. His arrest reflects widening legal and political consequences from the Epstein file revelations that have also embroiled other high-profile figures.


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    42 m