
Alice Poe And Her Motion To Remain Anonymous In Her Legal Battle With Epstein (11/15/25)
Alice Poe filed a civil complaint under a pseudonym (Alice Poe) against Epstein’s estate, alleging that she had been sexually abused by Epstein over a long period starting when she was a minor. Media reports state she accused him of grooming her, abusing her for about 15 years, and moving her through his orbit under false pretenses.In connection with her lawsuit, she sought a Motion to Proceed Anonymously (i.e., to keep her identity under seal) — asking the court to let her use the pseudonym “Alice Poe” rather than her real name. The motion was grounded in the highly sensitive personal nature of the alleged abuse and the risks she claimed would come with having her identity publicly revealed — including trauma, stigma, and potential retaliation.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 12min

Be Careful What You Wish For: Trump Calls for an Investigation and Opens Pandora’s Box (11/15/25)
President Trump’s recent call for an investigation into the Jeffrey Epstein scandal — even though driven by his desire to target political enemies — has unexpectedly opened the door to the one thing victims, journalists, and the public have demanded for decades: a full, unfiltered, scorched-earth investigation into the entire Epstein network. Regardless of Trump’s motives, the demand for a comprehensive inquiry is long overdue. The evidence already available is more than sufficient to launch a massive multi-pronged federal RICO case involving human trafficking, financial crimes, money laundering, international transport of minors, conspiracy, bribery, foreign intelligence ties, prosecutorial misconduct, and systemic institutional corruption. If accountability is real, then every person connected — billionaires, politicians, bankers, intelligence agents, celebrities, academics, royals, lawyers, prosecutors, and yes, Donald Trump himself — must be investigated without exception or favoritism. Justice cannot be selective. No more theatrics, no more distraction campaigns, no more redaction games.The only viable pathway forward is the appointment of an independent special investigator with absolute authority — someone outside the political system, immune to pressure, blackmail, influence, or partisan interference. The investigation must include full subpoena power, unrestricted access to financial records, sealed depositions, recovered digital evidence, and sworn testimony from every powerful figure who once believed they were untouchable. Anything less is cosmetic theater. This is no longer about Republican vs. Democrat, or about protecting reputations — it is about whether the United States still possesses the moral backbone and institutional will to pursue truth when it threatens the elite class. If Trump truly has nothing to hide, he should welcome the spotlight. If others do, they should tremble. The time for excuses has expired. Appoint the investigator. Open the vault. And let the truth burn.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 14min

The Epstein Industrial Narrative Machine: Megyn Kelly Edition (11/15/25)
In recent commentary that sparked widespread backlash, Megyn Kelly questioned whether Jeffrey Epstein should be labeled a pedophile, suggesting that because he allegedly preferred girls around the ages of 15 or 16 rather than much younger children, the term might not technically apply. Her remarks attempted to draw a distinction between categories of sexual exploitation, focusing on definitional nuance rather than the underlying criminal reality that Epstein was convicted of sexually abusing minors and running an international trafficking operation that recruited vulnerable underage girls. Critics argue that this framing risks minimizing the gravity of Epstein’s conduct and diverting attention from the extensive harm inflicted on victims.Kelly’s comments prompted strong public condemnation, including responses from journalists and advocates who said that reducing foreign coercion and trafficking of minors to semantic debate undermines accountability and trivializes the severity of the crimes. Observers noted that the language echoed past attempts by Epstein’s defenders to soften public perception and reframe him as merely inappropriate rather than predatory and violent.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 11min

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Good Pal Marvin Minsky (11/15/25)
Jeffrey Epstein’s relationship with transhumanism was never some passing curiosity—it was one of the central obsessions that animated the final decade of his life. He fancied himself a benefactor of “the future of humanity,” throwing money and influence at scientists who were willing to indulge his fantasies about genetic engineering, human enhancement, brain-mapping, and even selective breeding. Epstein hosted salons with top-tier researchers, funded fringe-adjacent longevity experiments, and pushed for projects that blurred the line between visionary science and eugenic delusion. Behind the PR gloss of “advancing human potential,” there was always the darker subtext: Epstein wanted to shape evolution in his own image, to create a world where elite men—just like him—could extend their lineage, their power, and their biological footprint.His relationship with Marvin Minsky fit neatly into that same paradigm. Minsky, an MIT legend and one of the founding fathers of artificial intelligence, became one of Epstein’s most publicly controversial scientific associates. Epstein courted Minsky aggressively—donations to MIT, invitations to his private gatherings, a seat at the table for any cutting-edge conversation Epstein thought he could buy his way into. Minsky, known for his brilliance but also for a certain intellectual detachment from moral scrutiny, was drawn into Epstein’s orbit at the same time Epstein was shaping his network of scientists into something between an advisory board and a trophy case. After Epstein’s arrest, Minsky’s name became part of the fallout, including allegations from Virginia Giuffre placing him at Epstein’s island—allegations Minsky was never able to respond to before his death. Their connection underscores a larger truth:to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 25min

Mega Edition: How The Deck Was Stacked Against Epstein's Survivors In Florida (11/15/25)
From the very beginning, the prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein was designed to protect him, not punish him. Instead of a normal criminal process, what unfolded in South Florida looked more like a negotiation between powerful friends. Prosecutors gave Epstein a level of deference that no other accused sex offender would ever receive. His lawyers were allowed to dictate terms, stall proceedings, and ultimately secure the secret Non-Prosecution Agreement that protected him and his accomplices from federal charges. Epstein’s victims were never told about the deal, his “sentence” let him work from his private office six days a week, and the prosecutors went out of their way to coordinate with his defense team to control media exposure. Every decision, from his jail privileges to the classified nature of the deal itself, showed that the system wasn’t just compromised — it was actively serving him.That preferential treatment revealed a justice system that bent under pressure from money and influence. The U.S. Attorney’s Office, led by Alex Acosta, treated Epstein’s wealth and connections as untouchable factors, and in doing so, erased any pretense of equality under the law. Even when later reviews tried to frame the debacle as “poor judgment,” it was clear that this was intentional — a calculated effort to shield Epstein and anyone tied to him. Prosecutors who should have fought for victims instead worked to silence them. What was supposed to be a federal criminal case became a containment operation, carefully managed to keep Epstein’s network out of the public eye and preserve the reputations of everyone standing behind him.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 1h

Mega Edition: Judge Preska Explains Her Plan to Unseal Maxwell/Virginia Files (11/14/25)
In her December 2023 ruling, Loretta Preska, the U.S. District Judge overseeing the case stemming from the civil suit by Virginia Giuffre against Ghislaine Maxwell, determined that more than 150 names that had been redacted from court filings would be unsealed as of January 1, 2024. She explained that the public interest in transparency outweighed the privacy interests of many involved, particularly because a significant portion of the information—such as names of associates and witnesses—was already in the public domain via media reporting, depositions, or previous filings. She granted anyone named in the documents a deadline to request a further redaction before the release.However, Judge Preska also made clear that not all records would become public: she insisted that names of minors or individuals whose involvement stemmed solely from victim-status would remain shielded, because their privacy interests outweighed any public benefit in disclosure. She cautioned that many of the names being released may lack context as to how they relate to the litigation or alleged misconduct — meaning a name in the filings does not automatically imply innocence or guilt.We also hear from Tartaglione's lawyer about the missing video.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 39min

Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And The Trial Strategy That Ended Up Costing Her In The End (11/15/25)
In the months leading up to her trial, Ghislaine Maxwell and her defense team attempted a calculated smear campaign against her accusers, portraying them as opportunists motivated by money, fame, and distorted memories. They tried to cast doubt on the credibility of the women who came forward, suggesting that their stories were inconsistent and influenced by the substantial compensation fund set up by the Epstein estate. Maxwell’s attorneys argued that she was being scapegoated for Epstein’s crimes after his death, positioning her as a victim of the public’s need for retribution. But the strategy backfired badly. Jurors were turned off by the tone of personal attacks, and prosecutors effectively countered with evidence showing decades of coordinated sexual abuse that Maxwell enabled, organized, and facilitated.By the time the trial reached its closing arguments, Maxwell’s attempt to discredit her accusers had collapsed under the weight of her own history and the testimony of those who once worked alongside her. The women’s accounts—harrowing, consistent, and corroborated by flight logs, photos, and financial records—left little room for doubt. Rather than appearing as a wrongfully accused associate, Maxwell came across as a manipulative enabler whose arrogance and lack of remorse sealed her fate. Her smear tactics, which may have once worked in Epstein’s world of influence and intimidation, had no power in a courtroom stripped of his protection. The verdict proved that the jury—and the public—saw through her defense, rejecting the narrative that these women were anything but victims of a long-running and calculated pattern of abuse.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 51min

Mega Edition: The Court Apologizes To Epstein Survivors And Who Is Bruce Reinhart? (11/14/25)
The court’s apology to the Jeffrey Epstein survivors came as a long-overdue acknowledgment of how profoundly the justice system had failed them. In open court, federal judges conceded that the victims had been deliberately misled during the original 2008 non-prosecution deal—kept in the dark while prosecutors secretly negotiated Epstein’s immunity and that of his co-conspirators. The apology recognized that these survivors were denied their rights under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act and that the system’s betrayal compounded their trauma, allowing Epstein years of freedom to continue abusing others. While symbolic, the apology served as a public admission that the government’s handling of the case was inexcusable, marking a rare moment of institutional accountability in a saga defined by corruption, influence, and silence.Meanwhile...Bruce Reinhart is a federal magistrate judge for the Southern District of Florida who became tied to the Jeffrey Epstein saga due to his career moves before taking the bench. Prior to becoming a judge, Reinhart served as an assistant U.S. attorney in the very office that was investigating Epstein during the 2006–2008 sex trafficking probe. In a move that raised serious ethical concerns, Reinhart abruptly resigned from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in 2008—just as Epstein’s sweetheart non-prosecution agreement was being finalized—and within days began representing several of Epstein’s employees, including pilots and schedulers who were viewed as potential co-conspirators. That revolving-door transition, from prosecutor to defense lawyer for Epstein’s inner circle, sparked outrage and remains one of the most glaring examples of the systemic coziness that surrounded Epstein’s first case.Reinhart’s actions were later cited in lawsuits accusing the Department of Justice of mishandling the Epstein investigation, with questions raised about conflicts of interest and whether his departure influenced prosecutorial leniency. Though Reinhart denied any wrongdoing, the optics were damaging—particularly as more details surfaced about how the 2008 non-prosecution deal effectively protected Epstein and his associates from serious federal charges. Years later, Reinhart reentered public controversy when he signed off on the search warrant for former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, bringing renewed attention to his past ties to the Epstein affair. His name has since become emblematic of the quiet backroom dealings and blurred ethical lines that defined the first Epstein investigation and the broader failure of justice that followed.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.
15 Marras 28min





















