Episodios

  • Mega Edition: A Deep Dive Into Ghislaine Maxwell's Meeting With The DOJ (12/2/25)
    Dec 2 2025
    The DOJ’s decision to meet with Ghislaine Maxwell after years of declaring the Epstein investigation closed is being met with deep skepticism. Critics argue that the timing—coinciding with mounting public and congressional pressure over the Epstein cover-up—suggests this is less about justice and more about optics. Maxwell is a convicted perjurer and trafficker with zero credibility, and any cooperation from her at this late stage is likely viewed as self-serving. The DOJ’s sudden willingness to hear her out, despite previously insisting there was no further evidence, raises serious doubts about their motivations and whether this is merely a distraction tactic designed to pacify outrage.


    Rather than pursuing unprosecuted co-conspirators or unsealing the trove of sealed Epstein files, the DOJ has opted for a tightly controlled, low-risk meeting with a disgraced inmate already behind bars. This move is seen by many as classic “bread and circus”—a gesture meant to create the illusion of accountability without threatening the powerful or reopening the case in a meaningful way. Unless the government follows this meeting with real indictments, transparency, and bold legal action, the public will continue to view it as hollow theater—a last-ditch attempt to salvage credibility in a case defined by betrayal, secrecy, and elite protection.


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    25 m
  • Mega Edition: How The Financial Sector Funded And Fortified Jeffrey Epstein (12/1/25)
    Dec 2 2025
    The financial sector didn’t just enable Jeffrey Epstein—they fortified him. For decades, elite institutions like JPMorgan Chase continued to do business with Epstein long after his 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor, ignoring internal warnings, compliance red flags, and credible allegations of abuse. High-ranking executives maintained close relationships, funneled vast sums through opaque accounts, and even joked about his grotesque proclivities in internal emails. Bankers helped him move millions across borders, granted him access to ultra-wealthy clients, and never asked the kind of questions they would demand from an average customer depositing a suspicious $10,000. These weren't oversights—they were decisions. Deliberate, profitable, and saturated with moral rot.

    At every turn, the financial institutions chose profit over principle. They ignored the trail of victims, the mountain of press coverage, and the glaring signs of criminality, all in exchange for Epstein’s connections and capital. Even as civil suits piled up and survivors came forward, these firms were more concerned with protecting their reputations than cutting ties with a known predator. The result wasn’t just a financial scandal—it was systemic complicity. The banks didn’t just launder his money. They laundered his legitimacy, allowing him to continue operating as a global financier, when in truth he was running an empire built on exploitation and secrecy.

    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    25 m
  • Ghislaine Maxwell Showed No Remorse For Her Victims While At The Same Time Taking Pity On Andy
    Dec 2 2025
    In the wake of her 2021 conviction for sex-trafficking and related charges, Maxwell has repeatedly denied wrongdoing — including rejecting allegations linking her to certain abuses. For example, in interviews and during recent meetings with investigators she has dismissed claims of sexual encounters involving Prince Andrew and one of her accusers as “fabricated.” Most notably, she described a notorious photo said to show Andrew with the accuser as “a fake,” claimed she never introduced Andrew to her former associate Jeffrey Epstein, and argued certain alleged crimes “could not have happened.” These denials, and her continued refusal to accept guilty responsibility, make clear that she has not publicly acknowledged remorse for the trafficking, exploitation, and suffering tied to her conviction.


    Yet in her first in-prison interview since the verdict, Maxwell expressed that she “felt so bad” for Prince Andrew, calling him a “dear friend” she cares about — even while acknowledging that their connection “could not survive” after her conviction. She spoke of him as “paying such a price for the association,” portraying him as someone suffering consequences because of his ties to her and Epstein. Her sympathy for Andrew — while simultaneously rejecting responsibility for her own role — sent a jarring message: she was willing to voice pity for a powerful man whose public standing was damaged, but not willing to extend empathy or accountability to the victims of her crimes.



    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    16 m
  • The Website Launched In Support Of Ghislaine Maxwell
    Dec 2 2025
    Ghislaine Maxwell’s family and friends created a website called RealGhislaine.com shortly after her arrest — presenting it as a “defense” platform to challenge how the media and public depict her. The site brands her as the “real Ghislaine” rather than the one-dimensional figure painted in headlines, claiming much of the coverage is sensationalized or misleading. On the site, her family issues statements calling her treatment unfair: they argue she was held in harsh pre-trial conditions without bail, portray the prison conditions as “cruel and unusual,” and emphasize that accusations against her stem from decades-old allegations often made by unnamed accusers.


    Beyond damage control, the website functions as a legal and public-relations hub: it hosts biographical information, legal filings including her appeals and petitions (for example a petition to the U.S. Supreme Court), and promises continuing updates on her case. It encourages supporters and media to sign up for confidential updates, framing Maxwell as a sister, step-mother, friend, and victim of injustice rather than a convict. In presenting her narrative, RealGhislaine.com aims to rewrite the public record — shifting the story from her conviction and the testimony of survivors to a portrait of alleged victimhood, injustice, and a fight for vindication.
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    26 m
  • Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell And The "Official" Origin Story
    Dec 2 2025
    Ghislaine Maxwell was born into extreme privilege as the daughter of media magnate Robert Maxwell, a man who built an empire on power, manipulation, and fear — and later died surrounded by allegations of fraud and espionage. Growing up in a world insulated by wealth, she moved through exclusive schools, elite social circles, and the highest levels of British society. When her father expanded his financial ambitions into the United States, she followed, establishing herself in New York’s upper echelon as a polished socialite eager to maintain the lifestyle she had always known. After Robert Maxwell’s mysterious and scandal-ridden death — and the collapse of her family’s fortune — Ghislaine found herself suddenly without the security she had been raised to depend on. Many observers have noted that it was precisely at this moment of vulnerability and desperation that she attached herself to Jeffrey Epstein, an extremely wealthy financier whose background was murky and whose rise defied clear explanation.

    The story of Maxwell meeting Epstein has been told in conflicting accounts, and none of them line up cleanly, which raises obvious questions. Some claim she already knew him through her father’s circles long before the public narrative acknowledges. Others insist they met only after she moved to New York and found herself adrift after her family’s collapse. What is clear is that she quickly became his closest companion — whether romantically, financially, or strategically — and helped usher him into circles of royalty, politics, and global business. From the beginning, the relationship looked transactional: she provided access, legitimacy, and elite social capital, while he provided the wealth and power she no longer had. The fact that neither Maxwell nor Epstein ever offered a straightforward, consistent explanation of their early connection leaves many suspicious that the truth is far more calculated — and far darker — than the polished public story suggests.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    18 m
  • Jeffrey Epstein And The Richest Men In The Room
    Dec 1 2025
    High-profile business figures including Sergey Brin, Thomas Pritzker and Mortimer Zuckerman were issued subpoenas in March 2023 as part of a civil lawsuit from the U.S. Virgin Islands against JPMorgan Chase & Co.. The subpoenas sought documents and communications potentially tying these wealthy individuals to the bank’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein — a relationship the Virgin Islands alleged helped facilitate a sex-trafficking enterprise.

    The legal push signaled a broadening of the investigation’s scope, moving beyond the bank and its former executives to probe the wider circle of elite clients and associates linked to Epstein. By pulling in Brin, Pritzker and Zuckerman, authorities aimed to uncover whether Epstein used wealth and connections — through financial referrals or shared networks — to sustain or conceal the trafficking operation, and to hold both institutions and individuals accountable for complicity.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    12 m
  • The Survivors Class Action That Exposed JP Morgan's Ties To Epstein (Part 4) (12/1/25)
    Dec 1 2025
    In the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, a class action lawsuit titled Jane Doe 1, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated v. JP Morgan Chase & Co. was filed. The complaint represented not only Jane Doe 1, but a broader group of alleged victims who claimed they suffered harm tied to the actions—and alleged inaction—of JP Morgan Chase & Co. The filing formally demanded a jury trial, signaling the plaintiffs’ intention to take the allegations into open court rather than resolve them quietly behind closed doors.


    The case was framed as both an individual and a class action complaint, raising the stakes considerably for the financial giant. By categorizing it this way, the plaintiffs positioned their claims as part of a larger systemic issue involving an entire group of alleged victims. The filing marked the beginning of what later became one of the most scrutinized legal battles connected to the Jeffrey Epstein network, setting the stage for intense public inquiry into the bank’s role and potential liability.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:


    Microsoft Word - 00513854.DOCX
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    11 m
  • The Survivors Class Action That Exposed JP Morgan's Ties To Epstein (Part 3) (12/1/25)
    Dec 1 2025
    In the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, a class action lawsuit titled Jane Doe 1, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated v. JP Morgan Chase & Co. was filed. The complaint represented not only Jane Doe 1, but a broader group of alleged victims who claimed they suffered harm tied to the actions—and alleged inaction—of JP Morgan Chase & Co. The filing formally demanded a jury trial, signaling the plaintiffs’ intention to take the allegations into open court rather than resolve them quietly behind closed doors.


    The case was framed as both an individual and a class action complaint, raising the stakes considerably for the financial giant. By categorizing it this way, the plaintiffs positioned their claims as part of a larger systemic issue involving an entire group of alleged victims. The filing marked the beginning of what later became one of the most scrutinized legal battles connected to the Jeffrey Epstein network, setting the stage for intense public inquiry into the bank’s role and potential liability.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:


    Microsoft Word - 00513854.DOCX
    Más Menos
    13 m