Episodios

  • The People vs. The Predators: The Epstein War Is Bigger Than Politics (11/19/25)
    Nov 19 2025
    A growing movement is calling out the decades-long failure of institutions to deliver justice in the Jeffrey Epstein trafficking scandal, arguing that the system has consistently protected powerful individuals instead of victims. After years of obfuscation, sealed records, shifting narratives, and political deflection, frustration has reached a breaking point. What was once treated as fringe or conspiratorial has become an unavoidable national and international reckoning, with visible cracks forming in the wall of silence that shielded influential figures across politics, finance, royalty, intelligence, media, and elite social circles. The tone of certainty that once accompanied official dismissals has shifted to defensiveness and unease, as public pressure intensifies and demands for transparency grow more forceful.

    At the heart of the movement is a unified push to transcend political divisions and focus on a shared objective: full accountability for those involved in Epstein’s network and a complete, unredacted release of all related records. Advocates argue that this case is not partisan but moral, and that unity across ideological lines is the only force powerful enough to break through institutional resistance. The call is for the immediate publication of every flight log, email, deposition, and document connected to Epstein and his associates, with no redactions or procedural delays. Supporters maintain that anyone resisting transparency is signaling complicity, and insist that the era of silence, distraction, and protection of the powerful must end now, declaring that justice demands exposure rather than continued concealment.


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    20 m
  • Mega Edition: What Did Other Inmates At MCC Have To Say About Jeffrey Epstein? (11/19/25)
    Nov 19 2025
    After Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his cell at the Federal Bureau of Prisons facility in Manhattan on August 10, 2019, several inmates and former inmates voiced serious doubts about the official narrative of suicide. One inmate who had previously been housed in the exact cell claimed that the architectural layout made a hanging suicide physically improbable—he cited lack of ceiling fixtures, low bunks, and other structural barriers. Others pointed to the absence of a cellmate, malfunctioning cameras, and alleged lapses in guard monitoring as factors that undermined the “alone in the cell” story.

    These inmate observations fuel persistent skepticism and speculation around Epstein’s death. Their accounts intertwine with documented failures by prison staff—such as broken cameras and falsified check logs—and with broader concerns that the system allowed, or even facilitated, a scenario where a high-profile detainee died under murky circumstances. Together, these statements from inside the prison ecosystem continue to drive debate over whether the official determination of suicide reflects the full reality of what happened that night.


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    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    39 m
  • Mega Edition: From Silicon Valley To Paris. They Knew What Epstein Was (11/19/25)
    Nov 19 2025
    It strains credulity to believe that the world around Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell—filled with elite elites in finance, tech, entertainment, and fashion—was completely unaware of what was going on. For example, Ellen Pao, former Reddit CEO and one-time partner at venture firm Kleiner Perkins, publicly stated that Maxwell was invited to a Silicon Valley holiday party in 2011 despite existing reports that she was supplying underage girls for sex. Pao wrote that “we knew about her supplying underage girls for sex” and yet “that was fine with the ‘cool’ people who managed the tightly controlled guest list.” This confession suggests that circles of power didn’t just “miss” what was happening—they arguably chose to ignore it.

    Similarly, the modeling industry had whispered about the predatory nature of agents like Jean‑Luc Brunel long before the Epstein-Maxwell drama exploded. Brunel was a longtime model scout and agency boss who received millions from Epstein to expand his business, and his name repeatedly came up in allegations of sexual misconduct dating back decades. The fact that such warnings were circulating in fashion—well before the mainstream reckoning—raises the question: how could so many people connected to these men claim no knowledge, no signs, no suspicion? When one entire industry quietly signals something is rotten, it becomes much harder to swallow wholesale claims of unaware innocence.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    49 m
  • Mega Edition: Scotland Yard And Their Multiple "Open And Closed" Epstein Investigations (11/18/25)
    Nov 19 2025
    Scotland Yard has come under intense scrutiny for repeatedly opening and then quietly closing inquiries into Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. When allegations involving Virginia Giuffre and potential UK-based trafficking surfaced years ago, the Metropolitan Police declined to pursue a full investigation, claiming it was outside their jurisdiction and not the “appropriate authority” to handle the matter. Even as mounting media coverage, survivor testimony, and public pressure demanded action, the force appeared determined to distance itself rather than confront the implications of a high-profile trafficking network operating on British soil. Critics argue that closing the case so quickly—despite the gravity and credibility of the accusations—looked less like a procedural decision and more like an intentional effort to avoid political and institutional fallout.

    Years later, when Scotland Yard announced it was reviewing new allegations against Maxwell related to grooming and trafficking in the UK, there was a brief sense of hope that justice might finally be taken seriously. But the review ultimately stalled without becoming a full investigation, igniting outrage from advocates who accused the force of protecting the powerful rather than defending victims. The pattern is unmistakable: initiate interest only under pressure, then retreat the moment attention shifts. To many, it feels like a choreographed performance meant to pacify public outrage rather than uncover the truth—a police institution more concerned with shielding reputations than exposing the depth of a criminal enterprise tied to elite circles.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    24 m
  • Murder In Moscow: The IGG Closed Hearing Transcripts (Part 4)
    Nov 19 2025
    On January 23, 2025, a closed hearing was held in the case of State of Idaho v. Bryan C. Kohberger before Judge Steven Hippler. The primary focus was the defense's motion to suppress evidence obtained through Investigative Genetic Genealogy (IGG), which they argued violated Kohberger's Fourth Amendment rights. Detective Brett Payne testified that the IGG lead was treated as a tip, with further independent investigation conducted to substantiate its validity. Defense expert Dr. Leah Larkin suggested potential violations of FBI policy and genealogy database terms of service during the IGG process. However, Judge Hippler expressed skepticism regarding the defense's claims, noting the lack of a reasonable expectation of privacy for DNA left at a crime scene.

    Following the hearing, Judge Hippler ordered the release of a redacted transcript, balancing public interest with privacy concerns. Redactions included the names of surviving roommates and distant relatives identified through IGG. The unsealed portions provide insight into the investigative methods used and the defense's challenges to the evidence's admissibility. This development underscores the ongoing legal debates surrounding the use of IGG in criminal investigations and its implications for privacy and constitutional rights.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    KB-25-01-23-Hearing-Redacted.ecl
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    12 m
  • Murder In Moscow: The IGG Closed Hearing Transcripts (Part 3)
    Nov 19 2025
    On January 23, 2025, a closed hearing was held in the case of State of Idaho v. Bryan C. Kohberger before Judge Steven Hippler. The primary focus was the defense's motion to suppress evidence obtained through Investigative Genetic Genealogy (IGG), which they argued violated Kohberger's Fourth Amendment rights. Detective Brett Payne testified that the IGG lead was treated as a tip, with further independent investigation conducted to substantiate its validity. Defense expert Dr. Leah Larkin suggested potential violations of FBI policy and genealogy database terms of service during the IGG process. However, Judge Hippler expressed skepticism regarding the defense's claims, noting the lack of a reasonable expectation of privacy for DNA left at a crime scene.

    Following the hearing, Judge Hippler ordered the release of a redacted transcript, balancing public interest with privacy concerns. Redactions included the names of surviving roommates and distant relatives identified through IGG. The unsealed portions provide insight into the investigative methods used and the defense's challenges to the evidence's admissibility. This development underscores the ongoing legal debates surrounding the use of IGG in criminal investigations and its implications for privacy and constitutional rights.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    KB-25-01-23-Hearing-Redacted.ecl
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    11 m
  • Murder In Moscow: The IGG Closed Hearing Transcripts (Part 2)
    Nov 19 2025
    On January 23, 2025, a closed hearing was held in the case of State of Idaho v. Bryan C. Kohberger before Judge Steven Hippler. The primary focus was the defense's motion to suppress evidence obtained through Investigative Genetic Genealogy (IGG), which they argued violated Kohberger's Fourth Amendment rights. Detective Brett Payne testified that the IGG lead was treated as a tip, with further independent investigation conducted to substantiate its validity. Defense expert Dr. Leah Larkin suggested potential violations of FBI policy and genealogy database terms of service during the IGG process. However, Judge Hippler expressed skepticism regarding the defense's claims, noting the lack of a reasonable expectation of privacy for DNA left at a crime scene.

    Following the hearing, Judge Hippler ordered the release of a redacted transcript, balancing public interest with privacy concerns. Redactions included the names of surviving roommates and distant relatives identified through IGG. The unsealed portions provide insight into the investigative methods used and the defense's challenges to the evidence's admissibility. This development underscores the ongoing legal debates surrounding the use of IGG in criminal investigations and its implications for privacy and constitutional rights.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    KB-25-01-23-Hearing-Redacted.ecl
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    12 m
  • Murder In Moscow: The IGG Closed Hearing Transcripts (Part 1)
    Nov 18 2025
    On January 23, 2025, a closed hearing was held in the case of State of Idaho v. Bryan C. Kohberger before Judge Steven Hippler. The primary focus was the defense's motion to suppress evidence obtained through Investigative Genetic Genealogy (IGG), which they argued violated Kohberger's Fourth Amendment rights. Detective Brett Payne testified that the IGG lead was treated as a tip, with further independent investigation conducted to substantiate its validity. Defense expert Dr. Leah Larkin suggested potential violations of FBI policy and genealogy database terms of service during the IGG process. However, Judge Hippler expressed skepticism regarding the defense's claims, noting the lack of a reasonable expectation of privacy for DNA left at a crime scene.

    Following the hearing, Judge Hippler ordered the release of a redacted transcript, balancing public interest with privacy concerns. Redactions included the names of surviving roommates and distant relatives identified through IGG. The unsealed portions provide insight into the investigative methods used and the defense's challenges to the evidence's admissibility. This development underscores the ongoing legal debates surrounding the use of IGG in criminal investigations and its implications for privacy and constitutional rights.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    KB-25-01-23-Hearing-Redacted.ecl
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    12 m