
Trump and Epstein: What the New York Times Revealed About Their Real Relationship (Part 1) (12/20/25)
The New York Times has reported that Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein shared a much closer relationship in the late 1980s through the 1990s and early 2000s than Trump has publicly acknowledged. According to the Times, Epstein described Trump as his “best friend,” and the two socialized frequently at parties, spoke often by phone, and were part of the same high-society circles, particularly bonding over women. Epstein’s former employees told the Times that Trump often discussed sex with him rather than business, and Epstein was described as Trump’s “most reliable wingman” in that era. While Trump has denied involvement in Epstein’s criminal conduct, the Times cited newly released emails and interviews suggesting Trump was aware of Epstein’s sexual abuse of girls, though no evidence has surfaced that Trump was directly involved in those crimes.The reporting also highlighted specific incidents and firsthand accounts that paint a picture of their social interactions: Epstein introduced several women to Trump, including at least one who was a minor at the time, and an email referenced Epstein “giving” Trump a 20-year-old woman. Former employees recounted Trump sending modeling cards to Epstein “like a menu,” and one woman’s story described Epstein directing her to social events where Trump was present. Although Trump and Epstein’s friendship reportedly soured by the mid-2000s, and Trump has repeatedly sought to distance himself from Epstein—saying they had a falling-out long before Epstein’s legal troubles—the Times reporting underscores a deeper and more personal connection than Trump has acknowledged.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/18/us/jeffrey-epstein-donald-trump.htmlBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 18min

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein, Harvey Weinstein And How Their Relationship Imploded (12/20/25)
Reports that Jeffrey Epstein and Harvey Weinstein once discussed teaming up to purchase a magazine offer a revealing glimpse into how two serial abusers operated in overlapping elite ecosystems, treating media ownership as both status symbol and leverage. According to multiple accounts, the plan reflected a shared belief that controlling a publication could provide influence, insulation, and credibility—another layer of protection in worlds where access and reputation were currency. The idea was never just about business; it fit a broader pattern in which powerful men sought proximity to institutions that shape narratives, quietly reinforcing their ability to move through social and professional spaces without scrutiny. That two figures later exposed as prolific predators were contemplating a joint media venture underscores how normalized their behavior was within certain elite circles long before public reckoning arrived.That normalization reportedly shattered when a falling out occurred, allegedly triggered by Weinstein crossing a line even Epstein would not tolerate—specifically, allegations that Weinstein assaulted or otherwise abused one of Epstein’s girls. While details remain contested and largely filtered through secondary reporting and witness accounts, the story has circulated consistently: Epstein, who notoriously treated young women as his property and instruments of control, reacted not out of moral outrage but territorial fury. The alleged rupture highlights the grotesque logic governing these men’s interactions—where exploitation was routine, but violating another abuser’s “ownership” was unforgivable. Whether or not every detail can be proven, the episode illustrates how predation, power, and entitlement operated openly enough that even disputes between abusers became known within elite networks, long before victims were believed or protected.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 33min

Mega Edition: Chauntae Davies And Her Jeffrey Epstein Nightmare (12/20/25)
Chauntae Davies, who was recruited as a masseuse for Jeffrey Epstein through Ghislaine Maxwell while training in massage therapy, alleges that her first encounter quickly turned sexual when Epstein masturbated in front of her. She returned under pressure and manipulation, believing that further appointments would rectify the situation. However, she claims that on the third or fourth session, Epstein raped her—beginning a pattern of repeated sexual abuse over a span of approximately four years across multiple locations, including New York, his Palm Beach mansion, the Caribbean island, and internationallyDavies describes being groomed through seemingly generous gestures—Epstein paid for her culinary education and her sister’s overseas studies—to blur the lines between caretaker and exploiter. She says that his and Maxwell’s control, plus the power dynamics highlighted by Epstein’s influential connections, made it difficult to escape until much later. Though Epstein died before she could confront him in court, Davies continues to fight for justice, expressing enduring fear and a sense that he remains “winning in death,” keeping the victims from closure.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 29min

Mega Edition: Jennifer Araoz Tells Her Story About Her Abuse At The Hands Of Epstein (12/20/25)
Jennifer Araoz alleged that Jeffrey Epstein began grooming her when she was just 14 years old, after one of his female recruiters approached her outside her New York City high school. Araoz claimed the recruiter slowly built trust, inviting her to Epstein’s mansion under the guise of mentorship and financial assistance. Over several visits, Araoz says she was manipulated into giving Epstein massages while wearing only her underwear, and eventually, those encounters escalated into full sexual assaults. She described being paid hundreds of dollars after each incident, reinforcing the transactional and coercive nature of the abuse.By the time she was 15, Araoz alleges that Epstein forcibly raped her during one of those visits. She recalls being paralyzed with fear, crying and begging him to stop, while he overpowered her. Afterward, he handed her money and continued to manipulate her into silence, using his power and the threat of isolation to keep her from speaking out. Araoz later dropped out of school due to the emotional toll of the abuse. She eventually filed a lawsuit against Epstein’s estate, his employees, and also named individuals and institutions she believed enabled the abuse by failing to protect her. Her account underscores the deliberate, calculated way Epstein preyed on underage girls—using female recruiters, financial coercion, and institutional neglect to shield himself from consequences for years.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:New Jeffrey Epstein accuser: He raped me when I was 15Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 36min

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein's Time At MCC And The Quiet Retirement Of The Warden (12/20/25)
Jeffrey Epstein’s time at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in Manhattan was marked by extraordinary irregularities that immediately set his detention apart from that of ordinary federal inmates. After his July 2019 arrest on federal sex trafficking charges, Epstein was placed in the Special Housing Unit, officially for his own protection, but the conditions of that confinement were riddled with contradictions. He was housed in a unit that was understaffed, plagued by malfunctioning cameras, and run by a Bureau of Prisons already under scrutiny for mismanagement. Despite being classified as a high-risk inmate due to the seriousness of the charges, his wealth, and the potential exposure of powerful associates, Epstein was repeatedly removed from standard suicide watch protocols. He was briefly placed on suicide watch after being found injured in his cell in late July, then taken off it under circumstances that were never convincingly explained, returning to a unit where basic safeguards were visibly failing.The failures at MCC culminated in Epstein’s death on August 10, 2019, when he was found unresponsive in his cell, officially ruled a suicide by hanging. On the night of his death, guards assigned to check on him allegedly fell asleep and failed to perform required welfare checks, while security cameras outside his cell were either broken or produced unusable footage. His cellmate had been transferred out shortly before his death, leaving Epstein alone despite prior concerns about self-harm. The combination of staffing shortages, ignored protocols, missing or nonfunctional surveillance, and a pattern of administrative negligence created a perfect storm that has fueled widespread skepticism about the official narrative. Epstein’s death at MCC did not close the case; instead, it intensified public distrust in the federal prison system and reinforced the perception that even in custody, Epstein remained surrounded by institutional failure and unanswered questions.The warden in charge of the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) at the time of Jeffrey Epstein’s death, Lamine N’Diaye, was reassigned and eventually quietly retired amid ongoing scrutiny and federal investigations into the circumstances surrounding the high-profile inmate’s suicide. After Epstein was found dead in August 2019, Attorney General William Barr ordered the warden removed from MCC and reassigned to a Bureau of Prisons regional office while the Department of Justice and Inspector General probed the facility’s lapses. Although there were efforts within the Bureau of Prisons to move him to other posts — including as acting warden at another federal facility — those moves became entangled with the unresolved investigations, and N’Diaye ultimately stepped away from his role quietly as the inquiries continued, with little public explanation or high-profile disciplinary action.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 44min

Mega Edition: The Death Of Jeffrey Epstein Was The Final Straw For MCC As A Facility (12/19/25)
The lead-up to the closure of the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan was shaped by years of mounting crises that long predated Jeffrey Epstein’s death but were dramatically amplified afterward. MCC had become infamous for chronic staffing shortages, crumbling infrastructure, frequent lockdowns, and extended power outages that left inmates in freezing cells without light, heat, or reliable access to counsel. Judges, defense attorneys, and federal prosecutors repeatedly complained that conditions at MCC interfered with constitutional rights and basic human safety. After Epstein’s death exposed systemic failures—nonfunctioning cameras, falsified guard logs, and gross supervisory breakdowns—scrutiny intensified. Internal Bureau of Prisons audits, DOJ Inspector General reports, and sustained public pressure painted a picture of a facility that was not merely mismanaged but structurally incapable of safe operation, accelerating calls for its permanent shutdown.The actual closure of MCC was announced by the Bureau of Prisons in 2021 and carried out in phases, with detainees gradually transferred to other federal facilities in Brooklyn and across the region. Officials cited the age of the building, extensive maintenance backlogs, and the prohibitive cost of necessary repairs as justification, effectively conceding that the jail was beyond saving. By mid-2021, MCC was fully closed, ending nearly five decades of operation in lower Manhattan. While the Bureau framed the move as an administrative and financial decision, the closure was widely understood as the final consequence of years of neglect and the reputational damage stemming from Epstein’s death. MCC did not close quietly because it was obsolete; it closed because its failures had become impossible to ignore, leaving behind a symbol of institutional collapse at the heart of the federal detention system.to contact me:bobbycapucci!@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 45min

The Family Of Bryan Kohberger Issues A Statement
Bryan Kohberger's family has released a statement about his arrest and the murder of Xana, Ethan, Madison and Kaylee. The Kohberger family expressed empathy for the families of the murdered college students while at the same time saying that they support Bryan and urge people to let the legal process play out before rushing to judgement.Let's dive in and see what they had to say.(commercial at 10:11)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Idaho Murders Suspect Bryan Kohberger's Family Make Statement (newsweek.com)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 15min

Bryan Kohberger's Aunt Speaks Out In The Wake Of The Arrest
Ever since the arrest of Bryan Kohberger, we have not heard much from his family. Now however, we are hearing from his aunt who lives in Las Vegas and she has some very interesting things to say about Bryan Kohberger.In this episode, we hear from his aunt about his behavior as a younger man and what she thinks about the allegations being made against him.(commercial at 7:18)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Idaho murders suspect Bryan Kohberger's aunt breaks silence and reveals whether she thinks he'll be found guilty | The US Sun (the-sun.com)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
20 Joulu 11min





















