• MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 11) (2/25/26)
    Feb 25 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 mins
  • Epstein and the DEA: The Investigation You Never Heard About (2/25/26)
    Feb 25 2026
    Newly released documents from the Epstein Files Transparency Act trove reveal that Jeffrey Epstein was the subject of a previously undisclosed U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) investigation, according to a heavily redacted 2015 memo included in the government’s files. The 69-page memorandum, marked “law enforcement sensitive,” shows Epstein was one of 15 people targeted in a probe focused on “suspicious money transfers” that federal agents believed were tied to illicit drug trafficking and prostitution activities in both the U.S. Virgin Islands and New York City, raising questions about whether Epstein’s criminal conduct may have extended beyond his well-known sex trafficking offenses. The document, drafted after the DEA requested information from a multi-agency Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force, suggests a significant investigation that spanned five years from 2010 to 2015, although many details and the identities of other targets remain redacted.

    The existence of this DEA inquiry adds a new dimension to the public understanding of Epstein’s activities and how thoroughly federal authorities were examining various aspects of his operations. While the later, better-known 2019 prosecution focused on sex trafficking and did not publicly include drug trafficking charges, the DEA memo indicates that investigators had been pursuing a potentially broader case years earlier. The revelations have prompted renewed scrutiny from lawmakers and law enforcement observers about what the newly released records might yet reveal about Epstein’s financial networks and whether narcotics trafficking played any role in his criminal enterprise.


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    source:

    Newly unearthed DEA document from Epstein files raises question: Did Epstein facilitate drug trafficking? - CBS News
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    17 mins
  • The Vanishing Pages: Did the DOJ Withhold Trump-Linked Epstein Records? (2/25/26)
    Feb 25 2026
    A new NPR investigation has revealed that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) appears to have withheld and even removed dozens of pages from the public database of documents released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act that relate to **sexual abuse allegations involving President Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein. According to NPR, records tied to FBI interviews and notes from conversations with a woman who claims Trump sexually abused her as a minor are absent from the public archive, even though evidence suggests those pages were catalogued and should have been released. Some materials where Trump’s name is mentioned were temporarily taken down and re-uploaded, and others remain unreleased, raising serious questions about whether the DOJ is fully complying with the law requiring transparency about the investigation.


    Critics argue that this selective release and redaction undermines public trust in the Justice Department’s handling of the Epstein files and appears to protect Trump from scrutiny despite his extensive mentions in the records — Trump’s name appears in tens of thousands of documents in the Epstein archive. Observers say the DOJ’s actions, combined with Trump’s repeated denials of wrongdoing and claims of “total exoneration,” have shielded him from accountability even as other figures tied to Epstein — such as Peter Mandelson — face arrest and legal exposure abroad. This has fueled criticism that the DOJ is more interested in managing political optics than in complete transparency or justice for survivors, weakening confidence in how elite connections to Epstein are investigated.


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    DOJ removed, withheld Epstein files related to accusations about Trump : NPR
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    25 mins
  • The Epstein Scandal Reaches Westminster: Peter Mandelson Arrested and Released on Bail (2/25/26)
    Feb 25 2026
    Former British cabinet minister and former ambassador to the United States Peter Mandelson, widely known as Lord Mandelson, was arrested on February 23, 2026, by the Metropolitan Police on suspicion of misconduct in public office as part of an investigation linked to revelations in the newly released Jeffrey Epstein files. Authorities allege that while serving as a senior UK government minister in 2009–2010, Mandelson may have passed sensitive UK government information to Epstein and maintained a relationship with him even after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. The arrest follows searches of his homes in London and Wiltshire and emerged amid growing public and political scrutiny over Mandelson’s ties to Epstein, which had already cost him his ambassadorial post and led to his resignation from the House of Lords and the Labour Party.


    After being taken into custody and questioned by police, Mandelson was released on bail pending further investigation, with the Metropolitan Police confirming that he must return for further enquiries as the case continues. Under UK law, misconduct in public office is a serious criminal offence, and Mandelson denies any wrongdoing. His arrest and bail come as the government faces intense pressure over its earlier decision to appoint him ambassador despite known concerns about his Epstein connections, and as lawmakers and critics demand further transparency and accountability in the unfolding investigation.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    Former UK ambassador Peter Mandelson released on bail | AP News

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    14 mins
  • Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Sentencing Hearing After Her Conviction (2/25/26)
    Feb 25 2026
    In June 2022, Ghislaine Maxwell was sentenced in federal court in New York to 20 years in prison and ordered to pay a $750,000 fine for her pivotal role in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking operation. Judge Alison J. Nathan underscored that Maxwell was not being punished as a proxy for Epstein, but for her own criminal actions, which included recruiting, grooming, and facilitating the sexual abuse of underage girls—some as young as 14. During the hearing, several survivors delivered powerful victim impact statements, emphasizing how Maxwell’s betrayal compounded their trauma. In response, Maxwell offered a brief apology, stating, “To you, all the victims… I am sorry for the pain that you experienced,” though many observers noted her overall lack of genuine remorse.


    She had previously sought a sentencing variance below the advisory guidelines—which ranged from 292 to 365 months—but the court rejected those efforts, citing the gravity of her involvement and the evidence presented at trial. The sentence reflected the maximum penalty under federal law, highlighting the court’s intent to ensure accountability.


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    Not Yet Known
  • Mega Edition: The Case for a Truth Commission in New Mexico In the Epstein Aftermath (2/24/26)
    Feb 25 2026
    New Mexico has formally established a truth and accountability commission to examine Jeffrey Epstein’s activities within the state, focusing particularly on what occurred at his Zorro Ranch property near Santa Fe. Lawmakers and state officials moved to create the commission after years of criticism that allegations tied to the ranch were never aggressively pursued while Epstein was alive. The commission’s mandate includes reviewing law enforcement records, victim complaints, prosecutorial decisions, and inter-agency communications to determine whether investigative opportunities were missed. It is also tasked with evaluating whether local, state, or federal authorities failed to act on credible reports connected to Epstein’s presence in New Mexico. The formation of the commission reflects growing pressure from victims and advocacy groups who argue that the ranch was a significant operational hub that never received the scrutiny it warranted. Unlike prior fragmented reviews, this body is intended to conduct a comprehensive and public-facing examination. Its scope includes subpoena authority, witness testimony, and document analysis tied to Epstein’s time in the state. Officials have framed the effort as an overdue reckoning rather than a symbolic gesture. The commission represents an acknowledgment that prior oversight may have been inadequate. At its core, it is an attempt to reconstruct what authorities knew, when they knew it, and why enforcement did not escalate.


    The creation of the commission stems directly from the perception that there was a profound lack of investigation both during Epstein’s active years in New Mexico and in the immediate aftermath of his death. Despite persistent allegations and the visibility of Zorro Ranch, there were no sweeping state-level prosecutions tied specifically to conduct on the property. Critics argue that jurisdictional ambiguity between federal and local authorities allowed responsibility to diffuse rather than concentrate. After Epstein’s 2019 arrest and subsequent death, calls intensified for a state-level inquiry into whether earlier complaints had been documented but not pursued. The commission is therefore positioned not only to examine Epstein’s conduct but also to scrutinize institutional response failures. Its work may reveal whether resource limitations, deference to federal authorities, or other systemic weaknesses contributed to inaction. By reopening the record, New Mexico is signaling that unanswered questions about the ranch cannot remain dormant. The effort also reflects broader national skepticism about whether Epstein’s network was fully examined anywhere it operated. In practical terms, the commission seeks to close investigative gaps that persisted for decades. In symbolic terms, it represents a state acknowledging that accountability mechanisms previously fell short.



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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    26 mins
  • Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Deep And Unexplained Ties To Saudi Arabia (2/24/26)
    Feb 25 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s relationship with elements of the Saudi royal family has long hovered in the background of the scandal, rarely explored with the seriousness it deserves. Epstein moved easily within elite Gulf circles during the 1990s and early 2000s, cultivating relationships with Saudi businessmen, royals, and intelligence-adjacent figures under the same vague cover he used everywhere else: finance, philanthropy, and “advising” powerful people. His access was not casual. Epstein traveled repeatedly to Saudi Arabia, hosted Saudi nationals at his properties, and was known to facilitate introductions between Middle Eastern elites and Western political and financial figures. As with many of his relationships, the exact nature of the services he provided remains opaque, but the pattern is familiar: proximity to power, insulation from scrutiny, and an ability to operate across borders with little interference from U.S. authorities.

    The most disturbing and concrete piece of evidence tying Epstein to Saudi state-level protection surfaced after his 2019 arrest, when law enforcement discovered he was in possession of a Saudi passport. The passport listed a false name but included his photograph, raising immediate red flags about who issued it, why it existed, and how Epstein obtained it. This was not a novelty item or souvenir. Saudi passports are tightly controlled state documents, and possession of one by a non-citizen under an alias strongly suggests official facilitation rather than private forgery. Epstein claimed he used it for travel in the Middle East, yet no serious public accounting has ever been given for how a convicted sex offender and alleged intelligence-linked financier ended up holding sovereign identity documents from a foreign monarchy. Like so much of the Epstein story, the discovery was quickly noted, then quietly sidelined, leaving unanswered questions about foreign intelligence ties, diplomatic cover, and how deep Epstein’s international protection network truly went.


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    45 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And His United Nations Connections
    Feb 25 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein cultivated relationships with figures connected to the United Nations through philanthropy, academic funding, and high-level networking. He presented himself as a financier interested in global policy, science, and development, and he leveraged donations to gain proximity to diplomats, development officials, and nonprofit leaders operating in UN-adjacent spaces. Through events, private meetings, and introductions facilitated by well-connected intermediaries, Epstein sought legitimacy within international policy circles, often portraying himself as a benefactor of scientific collaboration and global problem-solving initiatives. His strategy relied less on formal titles and more on access—positioning himself around influential individuals connected to global governance institutions.


    While there is no evidence that Epstein held any official role within the United Nations itself, his ability to move within elite international networks highlighted how private wealth can open doors to multilateral environments. His associations underscored broader concerns about vetting standards and reputational risk when wealthy donors or power brokers insert themselves into diplomatic and development ecosystems. In the aftermath of his arrest and death, scrutiny intensified over how he managed to build relationships within circles linked to global institutions, raising questions about influence, access, and oversight at the intersection of money and international policy.



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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    16 mins