• Mega Edition: Billionaire Playboy's Club...A Memoir By Virginia Roberts (Part 8) (3/10/26)
    Mar 11 2026
    Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s unpublished memoir The Billionaire’s Playboy Club recounts her recruitment into Jeffrey Epstein’s world as a 16-year-old working at Mar-a-Lago, where she says Ghislaine Maxwell lured her in with promises of opportunity and travel. The manuscript describes how she became trapped in Epstein’s orbit, allegedly forced into sexual encounters with powerful men, including Prince Andrew, and ferried across his properties in New York, Florida, and the Virgin Islands. Giuffre paints a detailed picture of coercion, psychological manipulation, and the disturbing normalization of exploitation within Epstein’s high-society circle.


    In this episode, we begin our journey through that memoir.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    Virgina Giuffre Billionaire's Playboy Club | DocumentCloud
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    36 mins
  • Mega Edition: Billionaire Playboy's Club...A Memoir By Virginia Roberts (Part 7) (3/10/26)
    Mar 11 2026
    Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s unpublished memoir The Billionaire’s Playboy Club recounts her recruitment into Jeffrey Epstein’s world as a 16-year-old working at Mar-a-Lago, where she says Ghislaine Maxwell lured her in with promises of opportunity and travel. The manuscript describes how she became trapped in Epstein’s orbit, allegedly forced into sexual encounters with powerful men, including Prince Andrew, and ferried across his properties in New York, Florida, and the Virgin Islands. Giuffre paints a detailed picture of coercion, psychological manipulation, and the disturbing normalization of exploitation within Epstein’s high-society circle.


    In this episode, we begin our journey through that memoir.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    Virgina Giuffre Billionaire's Playboy Club | DocumentCloud
    Show more Show less
    38 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And A Global Ledger of Convenient Deaths (Part 4)
    Mar 11 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s death inside a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 ignited a chain of suspicion that has never faded, morphing into a narrative where suicide is never just suicide. From Epstein himself to Jean-Luc Brunel in Paris, to former White House aide Mark Middleton in Arkansas, to Deutsche Bank executives and even Ghislaine Maxwell’s father decades earlier, each sudden death has been folded into a larger pattern. Official rulings of suicide or accident are met with disbelief, because the timing always feels too convenient, the circumstances too strange, and the institutions overseeing these figures too compromised.

    Together, these deaths form more than a morbid list—they’ve become symbols of systemic failure. Each one robs survivors of testimony, erases potential evidence, and reinforces the belief that the powerful never face full accountability. Whether by incompetence, coincidence, or conspiracy, the effect is the same: witnesses vanish, truth is buried, and public trust corrodes. In the shadow of Epstein, bizarre suicides are no longer personal tragedies—they are the story itself, a grim reminder that justice often dies before it can be delivered.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show more Show less
    12 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And A Global Ledger of Convenient Deaths (Part 3)
    Mar 11 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s death inside a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 ignited a chain of suspicion that has never faded, morphing into a narrative where suicide is never just suicide. From Epstein himself to Jean-Luc Brunel in Paris, to former White House aide Mark Middleton in Arkansas, to Deutsche Bank executives and even Ghislaine Maxwell’s father decades earlier, each sudden death has been folded into a larger pattern. Official rulings of suicide or accident are met with disbelief, because the timing always feels too convenient, the circumstances too strange, and the institutions overseeing these figures too compromised.

    Together, these deaths form more than a morbid list—they’ve become symbols of systemic failure. Each one robs survivors of testimony, erases potential evidence, and reinforces the belief that the powerful never face full accountability. Whether by incompetence, coincidence, or conspiracy, the effect is the same: witnesses vanish, truth is buried, and public trust corrodes. In the shadow of Epstein, bizarre suicides are no longer personal tragedies—they are the story itself, a grim reminder that justice often dies before it can be delivered.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show more Show less
    12 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And A Global Ledger of Convenient Deaths (Part 2)
    Mar 11 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s death inside a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 ignited a chain of suspicion that has never faded, morphing into a narrative where suicide is never just suicide. From Epstein himself to Jean-Luc Brunel in Paris, to former White House aide Mark Middleton in Arkansas, to Deutsche Bank executives and even Ghislaine Maxwell’s father decades earlier, each sudden death has been folded into a larger pattern. Official rulings of suicide or accident are met with disbelief, because the timing always feels too convenient, the circumstances too strange, and the institutions overseeing these figures too compromised.

    Together, these deaths form more than a morbid list—they’ve become symbols of systemic failure. Each one robs survivors of testimony, erases potential evidence, and reinforces the belief that the powerful never face full accountability. Whether by incompetence, coincidence, or conspiracy, the effect is the same: witnesses vanish, truth is buried, and public trust corrodes. In the shadow of Epstein, bizarre suicides are no longer personal tragedies—they are the story itself, a grim reminder that justice often dies before it can be delivered.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show more Show less
    12 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And A Global Ledger of Convenient Deaths (Part 1)
    Mar 10 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s death inside a Manhattan jail cell in 2019 ignited a chain of suspicion that has never faded, morphing into a narrative where suicide is never just suicide. From Epstein himself to Jean-Luc Brunel in Paris, to former White House aide Mark Middleton in Arkansas, to Deutsche Bank executives and even Ghislaine Maxwell’s father decades earlier, each sudden death has been folded into a larger pattern. Official rulings of suicide or accident are met with disbelief, because the timing always feels too convenient, the circumstances too strange, and the institutions overseeing these figures too compromised.

    Together, these deaths form more than a morbid list—they’ve become symbols of systemic failure. Each one robs survivors of testimony, erases potential evidence, and reinforces the belief that the powerful never face full accountability. Whether by incompetence, coincidence, or conspiracy, the effect is the same: witnesses vanish, truth is buried, and public trust corrodes. In the shadow of Epstein, bizarre suicides are no longer personal tragedies—they are the story itself, a grim reminder that justice often dies before it can be delivered.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show more Show less
    13 mins
  • Epstein’s European Connection: Jean-Luc Brunel and the Intercontinental Trafficking Empire (3/10/26)
    Mar 10 2026
    Jean-Luc Brunel, a French modeling agent and longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, was accused by multiple women of helping facilitate a trafficking pipeline that brought young women and underage girls into Epstein’s orbit. Brunel built a powerful career in the international modeling industry and later helped create MC2 Model Management with Epstein’s financial backing. Several accusers alleged that Brunel used his agencies and industry connections to recruit vulnerable girls from Europe and elsewhere under the promise of modeling opportunities, only for some of them to end up being exploited by Epstein and other wealthy men. Survivors described Brunel as a key figure who helped identify and transport girls into the network, effectively serving as a recruiter who operated through the fashion industry.

    French authorities eventually opened a criminal investigation into Brunel after Epstein’s arrest in 2019, as several women came forward accusing him of rape and trafficking of minors. Investigators in France viewed him as a central link between Epstein and a broader European network of alleged exploitation tied to the modeling world. Brunel was arrested in Paris in 2020 while reportedly preparing to leave the country and was later charged with rape of a minor and sexual harassment. The case, however, never went to trial. In February 2022 Brunel was found dead in his cell at La Santé prison in Paris, ending the prosecution and leaving many of the allegations about the alleged French branch of Epstein’s network unresolved.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Epstein Files Reveal French Castles Used as Sex Trafficking Sites While Underage Models Sent to US for Exploitation | IBTimes UK
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    12 mins
  • “Dudes, You Killed That Dude”: The Inmate Account That Raised New Questions About Guards at MCC (3/10/26)
    Mar 10 2026
    A federal inmate told investigators that shortly after Jeffrey Epstein was found dead inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, prison guards themselves were openly questioning what had happened. According to the inmate, he overheard officers talking among themselves about the death and one guard bluntly remarked, “Dudes, you killed that dude,” implying that staff believed their own failures or misconduct may have contributed to Epstein’s death. The statement surfaced during FBI interviews conducted as part of the investigation into the circumstances surrounding Epstein’s death in August 2019 while he was awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges.

    The account added to growing scrutiny over how the jail handled Epstein’s confinement. Epstein had previously been placed on suicide watch but was later removed from it, and on the night of his death two correctional officers failed to perform required inmate checks. Those same guards were later accused of falsifying log entries to make it appear that rounds had been conducted. The situation highlighted a series of breakdowns inside the facility — including staffing shortages, lapses in monitoring, and procedural violations — that raised serious questions about how one of the most high-profile inmates in federal custody could be left unmonitored in the hours before he was found dead.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    An inmate at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York told the FBI he overheard prison guards saying they would cover-up Epstein’s death | Miami Herald

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    15 mins