• Jeffrey Epstein Accountability Is Not a “Satanic Panic” — Here’s Why (3/2/26)
    Mar 2 2026
    Framing the current push for accountability in the Jeffrey Epstein case as a modern “satanic panic” mischaracterizes both the evidence and the nature of the underlying crimes. The satanic panic of the 1980s was marked by unfounded ritual-abuse allegations, moral hysteria, and prosecutions built on unreliable testimony. By contrast, the Epstein case involved documented victim statements, financial records, flight logs, plea agreements, federal indictments, and a criminal conviction of Ghislaine Maxwell for sex trafficking minors. Jeffrey Epstein himself pleaded guilty in 2008 to soliciting a minor and later faced federal sex-trafficking charges in 2019 before his death. The accountability effort today centers on transparency around prosecutorial decisions, institutional failures, and the scope of his network — not occult conspiracy theories or fabricated ritual claims.


    Equating calls for full disclosure and institutional scrutiny with moral hysteria also misses what made Epstein distinct: he operated within elite financial, political, and academic circles while exploiting minors, and he secured unusually favorable treatment in earlier legal proceedings. The central questions are about how that system functioned, who enabled it, and whether oversight mechanisms failed — not about imagined secret cults. Reducing legitimate demands for records, grand jury materials, and accountability to “panic” rhetoric shifts focus away from documented abuse and systemic breakdowns. At its core, the debate is about rule of law, transparency, and whether powerful networks are held to the same standards as everyone else.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    The Epstein files and the new Satanic Panic
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    19 mins
  • “There Were Victims”: Inside the Demonstration at Epstein’s New Mexico Ranch (3/2/26)
    Mar 2 2026
    In late February 2026, dozens of survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse and their supporters gathered for a demonstration at the former Zorro Ranch, the sprawling New Mexico property once owned by Epstein, to demand action and transparency from authorities. The demonstrators, many identifying themselves as victims or allies of survivors, stood outside the ranch grounds and held signs and chants calling attention to alleged abuses that they say occurred there and urging state officials to pursue a thorough investigation into what happened on the property under Epstein’s ownership. The protest underscored deep frustration with past investigations and a belief that justice has been delayed and incomplete.

    Security personnel, including armed private guards, were present at the site during the protest and monitored the gathering, reflecting the sensitive nature of the event and the high emotions involved. Participants emphasized that their presence was not just symbolic — many survivors spoke publicly about abuses they endured and stressed that the renewed state inquiry and “truth commission” into alleged activities at the ranch must lead to accountability, healing, and answers for victims. The demonstration came amid broader political and legal pressure in New Mexico for deeper review of Epstein’s activities and for unsealed documents to be fully examined.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    'There were victims': Protesters at former Epstein ranch demand action | Local News | santafenewmexican.com
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    17 mins
  • Mega Edition: The OIG Report Into The Death And Circumstances Of Epstein's Death (Part 7) (3/1/26)
    Mar 2 2026
    The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) report into Jeffrey Epstein’s death delivers a blistering indictment of systemic failures at the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) and his holding facility. It documents a litany of procedural violations: Epstein’s cellmate was removed and never replaced despite explicit policy, surveillance cameras in his unit were malfunctioning or not recording, and the staff responsible for required 30-minute checks on Epstein didn’t perform them. Instead, employees falsified records indicating those rounds were completed, and in reality Epstein was alone and unchecked for hours before his death. These aren’t isolated mistakes—they’re classic symptoms of institutional collapse and neglect at a time when every safeguard should have been activated.


    Beyond the immediate night of his death, the report underscores a deeper rot: long-standing staffing shortages, indifferent supervision, and a culture that tolerated policy breaches without accountability. The OIG identifies that the same deficiencies had been raised in prior reports about the BOP, yet were never effectively addressed. By allowing one of the most high-profile detainees in the nation to slip through the cracks under such glaring conditions, the BOP didn’t just fail Epstein—they failed the public trust and all the victims who sought justice.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    2 3 - 0 8 5 (justice.gov)
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    33 mins
  • Mega Edition: The OIG Report Into The Death And Circumstances Of Epstein's Death (Part 9) (3/1/26)
    Mar 2 2026
    The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) report into Jeffrey Epstein’s death delivers a blistering indictment of systemic failures at the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) and his holding facility. It documents a litany of procedural violations: Epstein’s cellmate was removed and never replaced despite explicit policy, surveillance cameras in his unit were malfunctioning or not recording, and the staff responsible for required 30-minute checks on Epstein didn’t perform them. Instead, employees falsified records indicating those rounds were completed, and in reality Epstein was alone and unchecked for hours before his death. These aren’t isolated mistakes—they’re classic symptoms of institutional collapse and neglect at a time when every safeguard should have been activated.


    Beyond the immediate night of his death, the report underscores a deeper rot: long-standing staffing shortages, indifferent supervision, and a culture that tolerated policy breaches without accountability. The OIG identifies that the same deficiencies had been raised in prior reports about the BOP, yet were never effectively addressed. By allowing one of the most high-profile detainees in the nation to slip through the cracks under such glaring conditions, the BOP didn’t just fail Epstein—they failed the public trust and all the victims who sought justice.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    2 3 - 0 8 5 (justice.gov)
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    Not Yet Known
  • Mega Edition: The OIG Report Into The Death And Circumstances Of Epstein's Death (Part 8) (3/1/26)
    Mar 2 2026
    The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) report into Jeffrey Epstein’s death delivers a blistering indictment of systemic failures at the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) and his holding facility. It documents a litany of procedural violations: Epstein’s cellmate was removed and never replaced despite explicit policy, surveillance cameras in his unit were malfunctioning or not recording, and the staff responsible for required 30-minute checks on Epstein didn’t perform them. Instead, employees falsified records indicating those rounds were completed, and in reality Epstein was alone and unchecked for hours before his death. These aren’t isolated mistakes—they’re classic symptoms of institutional collapse and neglect at a time when every safeguard should have been activated.


    Beyond the immediate night of his death, the report underscores a deeper rot: long-standing staffing shortages, indifferent supervision, and a culture that tolerated policy breaches without accountability. The OIG identifies that the same deficiencies had been raised in prior reports about the BOP, yet were never effectively addressed. By allowing one of the most high-profile detainees in the nation to slip through the cracks under such glaring conditions, the BOP didn’t just fail Epstein—they failed the public trust and all the victims who sought justice.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    2 3 - 0 8 5 (justice.gov)
    Show more Show less
    29 mins
  • JP Morgan Attempts To Get Files From The Manhattan Prosecutors Office
    Mar 2 2026
    JPMorgan Chase & Co. has asked the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, led by Alvin Bragg, to turn over certain records and documents as part of the federal lawsuits the bank is facing over its business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. The requests came amid litigation by Epstein accusers and the U.S. Virgin Islands that alleges JPMorgan enabled Epstein’s sex-trafficking network by maintaining him as a client for years, including after his 2008 conviction. JPMorgan is seeking statements and other materials from Bragg’s office that could relate to claims by a woman suing the bank — identified in court filings as “Jane Doe” — about what the bank knew regarding Epstein and his activities, and whether senior executives, such as former JPMorgan banker Jes Staley, had first-hand knowledge of his operations.

    A federal judge ordered the Manhattan DA’s office to provide a privilege log describing the documents JPMorgan wants and later ruled that certain statements made by a plaintiff to one of the DA’s prosecutors must be turned over to the bank. The judge’s rulings underscore how the evidence held by prosecutors in New York — including victim statements — may play a role in the civil cases against JPMorgan by shedding light on what the bank and its former executives may have known about Epstein’s criminal conduct during their interactions with him.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    15 mins
  • The "Epstein List" Was Always Part Of The Larger Disinformation Campaign
    Mar 2 2026
    The so-called “Jeffrey Epstein client list” was never meant to be found—because it never truly existed in the way the public was led to believe. From the beginning, the myth of a tidy, centralized list of elite names was allowed to flourish as a form of narrative control. It redirected attention away from the actual operational infrastructure Epstein had—hundreds of hours of surveillance footage, financial records, logs, communications, and coercive systems of recruitment and entrapment. By hyping the existence of a list while ensuring none would ever surface, investigators and media handlers created a perfect decoy: people kept searching for a ghost document while the real evidence—often compartmentalized, hidden across agencies, or buried under privileged redactions—slipped quietly out of public focus. The obsession with “the list” became the conspiracy, while the operation remained untouched.

    Social media influencers played a key role in amplifying this misdirection, whether they knew it or not. Some were likely given material or talking points through informal backchannels, while others jumped in out of clout-chasing instinct, chasing virality without verifying facts. The result was a flood of content that kept audiences locked onto the illusion that a single document would unlock everything, rather than asking who funded Epstein, who protected him, and who is still pulling strings to this day. Influencers—both grifters and the genuinely misled—ended up serving the same purpose: they diluted public pressure, created echo chambers of false hope, and helped intelligence-linked interests steer the narrative away from its dangerous truths. The “client list” was never the target. It was the trap.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.como
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    16 mins