• From Epstein to Empty Pockets: Prince Andrew’s Financial Freefall
    Mar 31 2026
    Prince Andrew’s downfall runs far deeper than Jeffrey Epstein. For decades, he’s lived a life of obscene privilege, spending like a billionaire while earning like a civil servant, and somehow the palace never asked how he was funding it. The truth is, Andrew’s entire lifestyle — the jets, the mansions, the security, the “business trips” — has been bankrolled by shady “friends,” loans that never made sense, and suspicious “gifts” that just happened to align with favors. Epstein didn’t create his corruption; he exposed it. The scandal ripped open decades of royal freeloading and backroom deals that turned the Queen’s favorite son into the monarchy’s biggest liability.

    Now the world’s finally catching up. The Epstein scandal may have started the fall, but the financial questions will finish it. The bills are coming due, and for once, there’s no palace PR team that can clean it up. The image of the dashing duke is gone — what’s left is a man who built his entire life on entitlement and other people’s money. And as the investigation into his finances grows louder, the truth is clear: Prince Andrew isn’t just disgraced — he’s the poster boy for everything rotten about royal privilege.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Public demands answers about Prince Andrew's unexplained wealth sources | Fox News
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    21 mins
  • The Epstein Files Deadline: Managing Expectations in a System Built on Silence
    Mar 31 2026
    As the December 19th DOJ deadline approaches, expectations for a meaningful Epstein file release remain predictably low. History suggests this will be less a moment of transparency and more a carefully managed pressure-release, offering recycled information already known while withholding anything truly damaging to the government or to Donald Trump. If there had been genuine intent to disclose the full truth, it would not have required months of procedural theater and resistance. Instead, the long delay itself signals reluctance, not resolve. A DOJ overseen by figures who have actively fought disclosure is unlikely to suddenly reverse course out of goodwill. Skepticism here is not cynicism for its own sake, but a rational response to an institution that has consistently prioritized self-protection over accountability.


    What should be expected is a document dump heavy on redactions, light on substance, and carefully curated to avoid embarrassment or legal exposure. FBI 302s, internal emails, candid assessments, and anything implicating systemic failures or political sensitivity are almost certainly off the table. Names may appear without context, timelines without consequence, and pages without meaningful content. If this release is perceived as insulting or deliberately hollow, it risks igniting a backlash that narratives and media spin may not contain. The real story may not be what is released, but what is conspicuously absent—and the justifications used to keep it that way. Epstein disclosures have only ever advanced under pressure, not voluntary transparency, and this release is unlikely to change that fundamental reality.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    11 mins
  • Inside The OIG Interview: MCC Captain's Statement Detailing The Death Of Jeffrey Epstein (Part 8) (3/31/26)
    Mar 31 2026
    This deposition comes from an unnamed captain at the Metropolitan Correctional Center and provides a detailed account of how Jeffrey Epstein was managed inside the facility, particularly in the Special Housing Unit. The captain describes Epstein’s status following his prior suicide incident, including the decision-making process around his housing, monitoring level, and classification. The testimony highlights that Epstein had previously been placed under suicide watch but was later removed from those heightened precautions, despite ongoing concerns about his mental state. It also addresses Epstein’s resistance to having a cellmate and the facility’s shifting responses to that issue, revealing a pattern where known risks were acknowledged but not consistently acted upon.

    The deposition also exposes broader operational failures within MCC, particularly regarding supervision, communication, and adherence to protocol. The captain’s account suggests that while staff were aware of Epstein’s vulnerability, the systems in place failed to ensure continuous and effective monitoring. Decisions around staffing, inmate placement, and observation procedures appear fragmented, with lapses that ultimately left Epstein in a position that contradicted earlier risk assessments. The testimony reinforces the larger picture of institutional breakdown, where responsibility was diffused across personnel and safeguards that should have been firmly in place were instead inconsistently applied.

    What makes this account difficult to accept at face value is how neatly it shifts the burden onto procedural gray areas rather than confronting the glaring contradictions in custody decisions. The captain’s testimony acknowledges that Epstein was a known suicide risk, had already experienced a prior incident, and required heightened oversight, yet still attempts to frame the subsequent downgrade in monitoring as routine or justified. That explanation strains credibility when measured against the totality of circumstances, particularly the repeated deviations from established suicide prevention protocols and the failure to enforce basic safeguards like consistent observation and appropriate cell assignments. Instead of clarifying responsibility, the deposition reads more like an exercise in institutional self-preservation—where systemic failures are reframed as isolated judgment calls, and accountability is diluted across layers of bureaucracy. In that context, the official narrative begins to look less like a coherent explanation and more like a patchwork defense designed to explain away decisions that, taken together, point to a breakdown that should never have occurred in a high-security federal facility.


    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00059973.pdf
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    13 mins
  • Trump and Epstein: The Post and Courier’s Investigation Into The Trump Allegations (3/31/26)
    Mar 31 2026
    An investigation examined the claims of a woman who reported to the FBI that she was abused by Jeffrey Epstein as a minor and later alleged that Epstein introduced her to Donald Trump, leading to an attempted sexual assault. Reporters worked to verify the details she provided, digging into her background, timeline, and the circumstances she described. Portions of her account—such as where she lived, aspects of her personal history, and certain timeframes—were found to align with available records, giving weight to elements of her story even as the most serious allegation remained unproven.

    The reporting also looked at how federal authorities handled her claims, noting that the FBI interviewed her multiple times but ultimately did not bring charges related to her allegations. The investigation highlights a familiar pattern in the Epstein case: individuals coming forward with accounts that partially match documented facts, yet failing to result in prosecutorial action. It raises broader questions about how such claims were evaluated, what standards were applied, and whether potentially significant leads were fully pursued or left unresolved.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Elements of SC Epstein victim’s FBI interviews check out
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    26 mins
  • Inside Epstein’s New Mexico Compound: Communications Tech and National Security Questions (3/31/26)
    Mar 31 2026
    Newly uncovered details draw a direct line between Jeffrey Epstein’s New Mexico ranch and some of the most sensitive U.S. nuclear research sites, including Los Alamos and Sandia National Laboratories. The ranch was reportedly outfitted with advanced communications infrastructure, including a microwave transmission system capable of sending and receiving data across long distances. Its positioning—geographically aligned between two major nuclear facilities—has fueled serious questions about whether the property functioned as more than just a private estate, potentially serving as a strategic relay point or data interception hub tied to highly sensitive information flows.

    The situation becomes even more explosive when looking at who later became connected to the ranch’s communications licenses—an individual described as a close ally of Donald Trump. That overlap has intensified scrutiny around Epstein’s broader network, suggesting that his operations may have extended into areas intersecting with national security, intelligence, or technological surveillance. When viewed alongside Epstein’s known pattern of embedding himself among powerful institutions, the possibility that his activities reached into critical infrastructure adds a far more complex and disturbing dimension to what was already one of the most far-reaching scandals in modern history.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    ‘Nuclear’ link unearthed between Epstein and major Trump ally: report - Raw Story
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    14 mins
  • Collaboration or Capitulation: The DOJ’s Colloquy With Epstein’s Lawyers Exposed (Part 2) (3/31/26)
    Mar 31 2026
    The back-and-forth between prosecutors in the Southern District of Florida and Jeffrey Epstein’s legal team during the negotiation of the non-prosecution agreement reads less like an adversarial process and more like a prolonged, collaborative dialogue aimed at reaching terms acceptable to Epstein himself. His attorneys were not simply responding to charges—they were actively shaping the framework of the deal, pushing for concessions on scope, immunity, and exposure not just for Epstein, but for potential co-conspirators. Instead of drawing hard lines, federal prosecutors engaged in a sustained colloquy that entertained defense proposals, adjusted positions, and ultimately bent toward a resolution that prioritized closure over accountability. The result was an agreement that allowed Epstein to plead to minor state charges while securing sweeping federal immunity, effectively shutting down a far broader investigation before it could fully develop.

    What makes this even more damning is how the Department of Justice appeared willing—if not eager—to accommodate Epstein’s demands at nearly every turn. Rather than treating him as the central figure in a sprawling abuse network, prosecutors treated him like a negotiating partner whose preferences needed to be satisfied. Victims were sidelined, key investigative avenues were abandoned, and the final agreement was structured in a way that insulated not only Epstein but others in his orbit from federal scrutiny. This was not a failure of resources or a lack of evidence—it was a conscious decision to resolve the case on terms dictated by the defense. The DOJ’s handling of this process reflects a systemic breakdown in prosecutorial duty, where the pursuit of justice was subordinated to expediency and deference to power, leaving behind one of the most glaring examples of institutional failure in modern federal criminal practice.



    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com




    source:

    EFTA00226107.pdf
    Show more Show less
    12 mins
  • Collaboration or Capitulation: The DOJ’s Colloquy With Epstein’s Lawyers Exposed (Part 1) (3/31/26)
    Mar 31 2026
    The back-and-forth between prosecutors in the Southern District of Florida and Jeffrey Epstein’s legal team during the negotiation of the non-prosecution agreement reads less like an adversarial process and more like a prolonged, collaborative dialogue aimed at reaching terms acceptable to Epstein himself. His attorneys were not simply responding to charges—they were actively shaping the framework of the deal, pushing for concessions on scope, immunity, and exposure not just for Epstein, but for potential co-conspirators. Instead of drawing hard lines, federal prosecutors engaged in a sustained colloquy that entertained defense proposals, adjusted positions, and ultimately bent toward a resolution that prioritized closure over accountability. The result was an agreement that allowed Epstein to plead to minor state charges while securing sweeping federal immunity, effectively shutting down a far broader investigation before it could fully develop.

    What makes this even more damning is how the Department of Justice appeared willing—if not eager—to accommodate Epstein’s demands at nearly every turn. Rather than treating him as the central figure in a sprawling abuse network, prosecutors treated him like a negotiating partner whose preferences needed to be satisfied. Victims were sidelined, key investigative avenues were abandoned, and the final agreement was structured in a way that insulated not only Epstein but others in his orbit from federal scrutiny. This was not a failure of resources or a lack of evidence—it was a conscious decision to resolve the case on terms dictated by the defense. The DOJ’s handling of this process reflects a systemic breakdown in prosecutorial duty, where the pursuit of justice was subordinated to expediency and deference to power, leaving behind one of the most glaring examples of institutional failure in modern federal criminal practice.



    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com




    source:

    EFTA00226107.pdf

    Show more Show less
    12 mins
  • Mega Edition: Billionaire Playboy's Club...A Memoir By Virginia Roberts (Part 6) (3/31/26)
    Mar 31 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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    37 mins