Episodios

  • Inside the OIG Interview: Tova Noel’s Account of the Morning Jeffrey Epstein Died (Part 23) (3/23/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    During the Office of Inspector General investigation into the death of Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019, correctional officer Tova Noel gave an interview describing how the morning unfolded when Epstein was discovered in his cell. According to her account, she and fellow officer Michael Thomas were assigned to monitor the Special Housing Unit overnight. Noel told investigators that when breakfast rounds began that morning, Thomas approached Epstein’s cell and noticed something was wrong. She said Thomas called out for assistance and that she moved toward the area, where Epstein was found hanging from a strip of bedding tied to the top bunk. Noel stated that Thomas entered the cell first and attempted to cut the ligature while she retrieved equipment to assist, after which they lowered Epstein to the floor so CPR could begin.

    However, the OIG investigation was highly critical of Noel’s conduct and the credibility of the circumstances she described. Investigators determined that Noel and Thomas had failed to perform the legally required inmate counts and physical security checks for hours during the night Epstein died, leaving him unmonitored in a high-risk suicide watch environment. The report also found that Noel later signed official count sheets falsely indicating that the checks had been completed, despite evidence showing they had not been. Surveillance records and other evidence suggested the officers spent large portions of the shift away from their assigned duties, and investigators concluded that their negligence created the conditions that allowed Epstein to remain unattended long enough to die. As a result, Noel’s interview with OIG was viewed less as a clear explanation of events and more as part of a broader record showing severe procedural failures and falsified documentation at the very time Epstein required the highest level of supervision.


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    source:

    EFTA00117759.pdf
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    15 m
  • Political Proximity: How Close Did New Mexico Officials Get to Epstein? (3/23/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    New Mexico authorities have reopened scrutiny into Zorro Ranch, Jeffrey Epstein’s sprawling property near Santa Fe, as investigators for the first time search the site for potential evidence of abuse. The renewed probe is being driven by a state “truth commission,” formed to examine how Epstein was able to operate in the state despite longstanding allegations. The ranch—long suspected by accusers to be part of his trafficking network connecting New York, Florida, and the U.S. Virgin Islands—is now central to questions about why earlier complaints were never fully pursued by law enforcement.

    The investigation is also raising uncomfortable questions about Epstein’s ties to powerful political figures in New Mexico. He donated more than $160,000 to state campaigns between 2002 and 2014, including contributions made after his 2008 sex-crime conviction, and maintained contact with prominent officials such as former governors and a state attorney general. Some donations were later returned, but critics argue the continued associations highlight a broader failure of oversight and accountability. Investigators are now examining not only Epstein’s activities at the ranch, but also whether institutional and political connections helped shield him from scrutiny for years.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    As New Mexico investigates, questions are raised about Epstein's links to the powerful
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    17 m
  • Ringmasters of Delay: Congress Keeps the Epstein Show Going Without Progress (3/23/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    The situation unfolding in Congress around the Jeffrey Epstein scandal reflects a growing gap between public promises of accountability and the reality of political hesitation. While lawmakers have spent years signaling outrage and pledging to expose the full scope of Epstein’s network, key members are now backing away from supporting actions—like subpoenas—that would actually force testimony and uncover deeper truths. This shift reveals a pattern of selective urgency, where investigations move forward only when they remain politically safe, but stall when they risk exposing powerful institutions or individuals. What’s presented as caution or procedural restraint often functions as a way to avoid consequences that can’t be easily controlled.


    At its core, this moment underscores a broader failure of institutional resolve. The Epstein case has long symbolized systemic breakdowns in justice, yet Congress appears unwilling to fully exercise its oversight power when it matters most. By choosing not to compel testimony, lawmakers risk reinforcing public skepticism that certain lines of inquiry are off-limits. The result is a perception that accountability is being managed rather than pursued, leaving victims without clear answers and the public with diminishing trust. What remains is less an investigation and more a performance—one where the appearance of action replaces meaningful results.

    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    17 m
  • Title Missouri Reverend Suspended After Epstein Island Management Role Revealed (3/23/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    A Missouri-based reverend has been suspended after it was revealed she previously worked for Jeffrey Epstein, including serving as a manager of his private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands during the final months of his life. The connection came to light through newly released Epstein-related records, which showed her involvement in administrative and logistical roles tied to the island. Church officials said they had no prior knowledge of this employment, and the suspension was triggered not by criminal allegations, but by concerns that she failed to properly disclose this work as required under church rules.

    The reverend has denied witnessing any abuse during her time working for Epstein, stating that her role was strictly professional and occurred after his prior conviction. She has not been accused of any wrongdoing, but the situation has raised broader concerns given the nature of Epstein’s operations and the extent of her documented presence in related records. The church has launched an internal review to determine whether policies were violated, while the case adds to the growing scrutiny of individuals connected to Epstein’s network as more files continue to surface.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Missouri reverend suspended after being exposed as last manager of Jeffrey Epstein's private island: 'Never saw anything'

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    11 m
  • Mega Edition: Day Number 8 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (3/22/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    The Ghislaine Maxwell trial, held in late 2021 in federal court in New York, centered on her alleged role as Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirator in a sex trafficking ring that preyed on underage girls for over a decade. Prosecutors accused Maxwell of grooming minors, gaining their trust, and then facilitating or participating in their abuse at the hands of Epstein between 1994 and 2004. The government’s case included testimony from four women, some of whom described in painful detail how Maxwell recruited them as teenagers under the guise of mentorship or financial assistance, only to manipulate them into sexual encounters with Epstein. Flight logs, photographs, and household staff testimony were used to place Maxwell at various Epstein properties and show her long-standing involvement in his lifestyle and operations.


    Maxwell’s defense team attempted to cast her as a scapegoat, arguing that she was being punished for Epstein’s crimes following his 2019 death in federal custody. They challenged the credibility of the accusers, questioned their motives, and pointed to the time gaps between the alleged crimes and the trial. Ultimately, the jury found Maxwell guilty on five of six federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor, and not guilty on one count of enticing a minor to travel for illegal sex acts. The conviction marked a rare moment of accountability in a case that had long been plagued by cover-ups, prosecutorial failures, and elite protection. It also opened the door to further scrutiny of Epstein’s network, although many key figures remain untouched.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    36 m
  • Mega Edition: Day Number 7 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (3/22/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    The Ghislaine Maxwell trial, held in late 2021 in federal court in New York, centered on her alleged role as Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirator in a sex trafficking ring that preyed on underage girls for over a decade. Prosecutors accused Maxwell of grooming minors, gaining their trust, and then facilitating or participating in their abuse at the hands of Epstein between 1994 and 2004. The government’s case included testimony from four women, some of whom described in painful detail how Maxwell recruited them as teenagers under the guise of mentorship or financial assistance, only to manipulate them into sexual encounters with Epstein. Flight logs, photographs, and household staff testimony were used to place Maxwell at various Epstein properties and show her long-standing involvement in his lifestyle and operations.


    Maxwell’s defense team attempted to cast her as a scapegoat, arguing that she was being punished for Epstein’s crimes following his 2019 death in federal custody. They challenged the credibility of the accusers, questioned their motives, and pointed to the time gaps between the alleged crimes and the trial. Ultimately, the jury found Maxwell guilty on five of six federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor, and not guilty on one count of enticing a minor to travel for illegal sex acts. The conviction marked a rare moment of accountability in a case that had long been plagued by cover-ups, prosecutorial failures, and elite protection. It also opened the door to further scrutiny of Epstein’s network, although many key figures remain untouched.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    43 m
  • Mega Edition: Day Number 6 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (3/22/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    The Ghislaine Maxwell trial, held in late 2021 in federal court in New York, centered on her alleged role as Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirator in a sex trafficking ring that preyed on underage girls for over a decade. Prosecutors accused Maxwell of grooming minors, gaining their trust, and then facilitating or participating in their abuse at the hands of Epstein between 1994 and 2004. The government’s case included testimony from four women, some of whom described in painful detail how Maxwell recruited them as teenagers under the guise of mentorship or financial assistance, only to manipulate them into sexual encounters with Epstein. Flight logs, photographs, and household staff testimony were used to place Maxwell at various Epstein properties and show her long-standing involvement in his lifestyle and operations.


    Maxwell’s defense team attempted to cast her as a scapegoat, arguing that she was being punished for Epstein’s crimes following his 2019 death in federal custody. They challenged the credibility of the accusers, questioned their motives, and pointed to the time gaps between the alleged crimes and the trial. Ultimately, the jury found Maxwell guilty on five of six federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor, and not guilty on one count of enticing a minor to travel for illegal sex acts. The conviction marked a rare moment of accountability in a case that had long been plagued by cover-ups, prosecutorial failures, and elite protection. It also opened the door to further scrutiny of Epstein’s network, although many key figures remain untouched.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    32 m
  • Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Underbelly Of The Modeling Industry (3/22/26)
    Mar 23 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s world bled right into the dark corners of the modeling industry — the kind of places where luxury and depravity blur together under the same chandelier light. He used modeling as both a cover and a recruitment pool, pretending to be a gatekeeper to fame and fashion while exploiting the industry’s obsession with youth, beauty, and access. Agencies, scouts, and so-called “talent finders” were part of this sleazy ecosystem — some complicit, others willfully blind — funneling vulnerable girls into Epstein’s orbit with promises of photoshoots, mentorships, or introductions to elite circles. Behind the high-fashion gloss was a global network of manipulation: fake casting calls, private jets filled with “models,” and connections to legitimate modeling agencies that lent Epstein’s operation an air of credibility. It wasn’t just sex trafficking — it was the corruption of an entire image-based industry where power could be traded for flesh and silence was the unspoken price of admission.

    What made it all so insidious was how normalized it became. Epstein’s connections to modeling power players like Jean-Luc Brunel, MC2 Model Management, and other agencies gave him a steady supply chain disguised as opportunity. Young women from Eastern Europe, South America, and small-town America were lured in by the same dream — the fantasy of walking Paris runways or being discovered at an upscale resort — only to find themselves trapped in something far darker. Epstein and his associates exploited the same machinery that made supermodels into icons, twisting it into a predatory conveyor belt. The “underbelly” wasn’t a hidden world at all — it was the same glitzy one the public adored, just seen from a different angle: the hotel rooms behind the runway, the cash envelopes, the passports held hostage, and the broken promise that fame could ever be worth that kind of nightmare.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    1 h y 3 m