• Nadia Marcinkova Pleads The 5th Over 42 Times During Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition
    Dec 25 2025
    Nadia Marcinkova—often referred to as Epstein’s “Global Girl” or “live-in sex slave”—emerged as a central enigma in Epstein’s criminal web. Brought to the U.S. at about age 15, she quickly rose to become his trusted aide, frequently traveling with him aboard the infamous "Lolita Express" private jet. Legal filings and flight manifests implicate her in recruitment and involvement in the sexual abuse of minors, with victims asserting that she both facilitated abuse and participated in it . Despite these serious allegations, Marcinkova never faced charges; under Epstein’s 2008 Florida non-prosecution agreement, she received immunity and has since remained shielded from criminal accountability.

    In the years following her legal protection, Marcinkova rebranded herself—completing flight certifications, launching an aviation business, and maintaining a low-profile existence in Manhattan’s Upper East Side. Yet her past continues to cast a long shadow: victims’ve named her in suits, and new court filings have resurrected scrutiny of her role within Epstein’s organization . Her consistent silence—invoking the Fifth Amendment, refusing deposition answers—and strategic disappearance following recent document unsealing further amplify suspicions. Though never prosecuted, Marcinkova typifies how Epstein’s closest associates slipped through loopholes in an investigation heavy on wealth, power, and protection.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Former model who was Jeffrey Epstein's 'Lolita Express' pilot pleaded the fifth 42 TIMES in deposition including questions about Bill Clinton and whether she witnessed 'improper sexual activity' between pedo and minors in presence of ex-president | Daily Mail Online
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    13 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein's Core 4 And The DOJ's Refusal To Prosecute Them
    Dec 25 2025
    The Department of Justice’s decision to let Jeffrey Epstein’s inner circle of enablers—Nadia Marcinkova, Leslie Groff, Adriana Ross, and Sarah Kellen Vickers—walk away without a single criminal charge is an unforgivable stain on the agency’s credibility. These four women weren’t passive bystanders; they were active facilitators, named repeatedly in sworn testimony, lawsuits, and official documents as key players who helped recruit, schedule, and silence victims. Some even participated directly in the abuse or destroyed potential evidence. The idea that there was insufficient cause to prosecute them is a disgraceful lie. The DOJ had mountains of testimony and documentation, yet still chose to shield these women behind a veil of bureaucratic apathy. This wasn’t a case of legal nuance or lack of evidence—it was institutional cowardice dressed up as prosecutorial discretion.


    Now, with the DOJ formally closing its investigation, the last vestige of accountability has been buried. The victims, many of whom spoke out courageously in the face of retaliation, are left to watch as the women who helped orchestrate their suffering go on with their lives, untouched and unrepentant. The message this sends is chilling: if you're powerful enough—or close enough to someone who is—the American justice system will find a way to let you off the hook. This wasn’t justice.

    The DOJ didn’t just fail to pursue charges—they cemented a legacy of betrayal. The door is closed, the case is buried, and the “core four” walk free, their roles whitewashed by the very institution that claimed it was working on behalf of the victims.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Epstein's women 'recruiters' granted immunity by 2008 sweetheart deal could now be investigated | Daily Mail Online
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    16 mins
  • Lesley Groff And How The DOJ Looked The Other Way
    Dec 24 2025
    Lesley Groff was more than just Jeffrey Epstein’s assistant—she was allegedly one of the operational architects behind the scenes of his trafficking empire. For years, Groff managed Epstein’s calendar, travel logistics, and appointments, but the allegations against her go much deeper than administrative work. Victims and lawsuits have accused her of coordinating meetings that were, in reality, abuse sessions involving underage girls. She’s been described as someone who not only arranged encounters but also actively facilitated the recruitment process by maintaining contact with young girls and, in some cases, instructing them to bring others. Her office wasn’t a neutral workspace—it was the nerve center of a global sex trafficking ring hiding behind layers of wealth and corporate polish.


    Despite these disturbing claims, Groff has never been criminally charged. She was one of the individuals protected under Epstein’s infamous 2008 non-prosecution agreement, which granted immunity to unnamed co-conspirators and allowed key enablers to escape justice entirely. In the years since, she's managed to keep a low profile, rarely speaking publicly while civil suits were quietly dismissed or settled. Her continued freedom, in the face of such serious allegations, is a reminder of how deeply entrenched Epstein’s protection network was—and how many of those who helped orchestrate his abuse still walk free, untouched by the justice system. Groff’s story isn’t just about her—it’s about a system that shielded the guilty while survivors were left to carry the weight of silence.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Epstein assistant accused of supplying girls for the pedophile WILL NOT face charges | Daily Mail Online
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    17 mins
  • Clayton Howard Turns Up The Pressure On Cassie And Diddy In His Amended Complaint (Part 2) (12/24/25)
    Dec 24 2025
    The Second Amended Complaint filed by Clayton Howard in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California lays out a sweeping civil case against Sean Combs, Cassandra Ventura, Bad Boy Records, Combs Enterprises, and the Beverly Hills Hotel Corporation. Howard alleges a pattern of abuse, coercion, intimidation, and exploitation tied to Combs’ business empire, asserting that the defendants either directly participated in or knowingly enabled unlawful conduct. The complaint expands on earlier filings by adding detail, refining claims, and asserting that the alleged misconduct was not isolated but systemic, facilitated through corporate structures, private residences, hotels, and entertainment-industry power dynamics. Howard demands a jury trial and seeks damages, framing the case as one rooted in abuse of power, retaliation, and institutional complicity.


    The amended filing also emphasizes the role of corporate defendants and venues, particularly the Beverly Hills Hotel, arguing that they failed in their duty to protect individuals from foreseeable harm and instead allowed their premises to be used in furtherance of alleged misconduct. By naming both individuals and corporate entities, the complaint aims to pierce the separation between Combs’ personal actions and his business operations, asserting joint liability across the enterprise. The Second Amended Complaint positions the case not merely as a dispute between private parties, but as a broader reckoning with how celebrity, money, and corporate shielding can be used to suppress accountability, with Howard seeking both financial relief and public adjudication of the claims before a jury.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Second Amended Complaint Howard v Combs Ventura.pdf
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    11 mins
  • Clayton Howard Turns Up The Pressure On Cassie And Diddy In His Amended Complaint (Part 1) (12/24/25)
    Dec 24 2025
    The Second Amended Complaint filed by Clayton Howard in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California lays out a sweeping civil case against Sean Combs, Cassandra Ventura, Bad Boy Records, Combs Enterprises, and the Beverly Hills Hotel Corporation. Howard alleges a pattern of abuse, coercion, intimidation, and exploitation tied to Combs’ business empire, asserting that the defendants either directly participated in or knowingly enabled unlawful conduct. The complaint expands on earlier filings by adding detail, refining claims, and asserting that the alleged misconduct was not isolated but systemic, facilitated through corporate structures, private residences, hotels, and entertainment-industry power dynamics. Howard demands a jury trial and seeks damages, framing the case as one rooted in abuse of power, retaliation, and institutional complicity.


    The amended filing also emphasizes the role of corporate defendants and venues, particularly the Beverly Hills Hotel, arguing that they failed in their duty to protect individuals from foreseeable harm and instead allowed their premises to be used in furtherance of alleged misconduct. By naming both individuals and corporate entities, the complaint aims to pierce the separation between Combs’ personal actions and his business operations, asserting joint liability across the enterprise. The Second Amended Complaint positions the case not merely as a dispute between private parties, but as a broader reckoning with how celebrity, money, and corporate shielding can be used to suppress accountability, with Howard seeking both financial relief and public adjudication of the claims before a jury.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Second Amended Complaint Howard v Combs Ventura.pdf
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    12 mins
  • Another Day, Another Epstein Dump, Another Trust Breakdown (12/24/25)
    Dec 24 2025
    The U.S. Department of Justice released another massive tranche of Epstein-related materials early Tuesday under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, bringing the total to tens of thousands of new pages and media now publicly searchable online. Reports indicate nearly 30,000 additional documents and video clips were posted, though many remain heavily redacted or unclear in significance. The new files include emails, surveillance footage, evidence logs, and other investigative records connected to Epstein’s case and associates, drawing renewed attention to his criminal network and the scope of federal investigation. The DOJ’s release notes that some claims contained in the documents — including allegations about public figures — are unverified or sensationalist and were included to comply with the law’s transparency requirements rather than as evidence of criminal conduct. Victims’ advocates continue to criticize the pace and depth of disclosure, and political controversy has flared as some files released earlier this week were removed without explanation.


    Among the notable contents in this December 23 dump are emails suggesting previously unseen communications involving Ghislaine Maxwell and a sender linked to “Balmoral,” possibly tied to a British royal, as well as flight records and correspondence referencing former President Donald Trump’s travel on Epstein’s jet more often than previously documented — though context and implications remain heavily redacted. The release also reportedly contains surveillance materials from the timeframe around Epstein’s death, adding to ongoing public distrust and speculation about transparency in the case. High-profile reactions include political pushback over reputational concerns, continued disputes over redaction practices, and calls from lawmakers for enforcement of the transparency law after deadlines were missed.



    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Epstein files live updates as Justice Department releases huge new set of documents, photos
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    19 mins
  • Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s Draft Will Featuring Larry Summers and Jes Staley (12/24/25)
    Dec 24 2025
    Recently unsealed Department of Justice records show that **Jeffrey Epstein named Jes Staley and Larry Summers as potential executors in earlier draft versions of his estate planning documents from the 2010s, though neither appeared in the final will he signed in 2019. According to the newly released materials under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, Staley first appeared in a 2012 draft as a “successor executor” and was later listed as a full executor in versions from 2013 and 2014, while Summers was named a successor executor in a 2014 revision. These designations would have given both men significant authority over Epstein’s vast estate if the primary executors were unable or unwilling to serve — a striking inclusion given their high public profiles. However, in the final will drafted shortly before Epstein’s death, both men were removed and are absent from the 2019 document that ultimately governs the estate.

    Oh these are the guys we’re supposed to tiptoe around for? These are the delicate reputations the system keeps clearing its throat to protect? A Wall Street lifer who can’t explain his Epstein emails without tripping over himself, and an academic power broker who spent years pretending his association with Epstein was some innocent clerical error? These are the men whose good names require sealed files, careful wording, and institutional panic? Give me a break. If the truth about a dead sex trafficker’s will is enough to embarrass you, then maybe the embarrassment isn’t the problem — maybe it’s the résumé. The idea that the public must be shielded from learning that Jeffrey Epstein trusted these guys with his estate isn’t discretion, it’s comedy. And not even good comedy — it’s the kind that only plays in boardrooms where accountability has been dead longer than Epstein himself.


    to conact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Jeffrey Epstein named Larry Summers, Jes Staley as estate executors in draft wills | New York Post
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    16 mins
  • How the Epstein Files Finally Put Prince Andrew on the Witness List (12/24/25)
    Dec 24 2025
    The latest Epstein document release further reinforces how deeply Prince Andrew was entangled in Jeffrey Epstein’s orbit and how aware authorities were of his potential exposure long before public accountability set in. Newly surfaced investigative materials show that prosecutors believed Andrew had direct knowledge of Ghislaine Maxwell’s role in recruiting young women and sought to question him formally about his relationship with Epstein, his presence around victims, and his continued contact after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. The documents make clear that Andrew was not viewed as a peripheral figure, but as someone investigators considered central enough to warrant detailed questioning under caution. Despite this, no interview ever took place, underscoring the long-standing gap between investigative interest and actual enforcement when it came to a senior royal.


    The files also highlight the extraordinary degree of institutional hesitation surrounding Andrew, both in the United Kingdom and internationally. While investigators outlined lines of questioning and compiled evidence, diplomatic sensitivities and royal privilege effectively stalled progress. Andrew’s refusal to cooperate was tolerated for years, even as civil litigation and survivor testimony mounted, and British authorities showed little urgency in compelling his participation. The documents illustrate a pattern in which reputational risk to the monarchy consistently outweighed accountability, allowing Andrew to avoid meaningful scrutiny until public pressure became impossible to ignore. Rather than revealing new allegations, the release confirms what survivors and journalists have long argued: that Prince Andrew was shielded not by a lack of concern, but by a system unwilling to confront power.


    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Andrew 'knew Ghislaine was a sex madam', Epstein cops believed - as new docs reveal efforts to quiz royal under caution
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    23 mins