
Donald Trump Signs The Epstein Transparency Bill Into Law (Part 2) (11/20/25)
President Donald Trump abruptly reversed his longstanding opposition to public disclosure of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein’s network, telling House Republicans to back a measure requiring the Department of Justice to release Epstein-related files. He previously labelled the disclosure effort a “hoax” and actively resisted it, but as bipartisan and intraparty pressure mounted—including from conservative lawmakers—the tide shifted and he pledged to sign the bill if passed.The legislation mandates the DOJ to publish all unclassified records tied to Epstein’s investigations within 30 days, with limited allowances for redactions only to protect victims or continuing probes; it explicitly bars withholding records on the basis of embarrassment or political sensitivity. The move comes amid growing scrutiny of Epstein’s ties to powerful figures and renewed demands for accountability, even as questions linger about Trump’s motivations for this pivot and whether it signals a genuine commitment to transparency or a tactical retreat under mounting pressure.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:How Trump reversed course on the Epstein files as his administration faces lingering suspicion about their release | CNN PoliticsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Marras 19min

Donald Trump Signs The Epstein Transparency Bill Into Law (Part 1) (11/20/25)
President Donald Trump abruptly reversed his longstanding opposition to public disclosure of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein’s network, telling House Republicans to back a measure requiring the Department of Justice to release Epstein-related files. He previously labelled the disclosure effort a “hoax” and actively resisted it, but as bipartisan and intraparty pressure mounted—including from conservative lawmakers—the tide shifted and he pledged to sign the bill if passed.The legislation mandates the DOJ to publish all unclassified records tied to Epstein’s investigations within 30 days, with limited allowances for redactions only to protect victims or continuing probes; it explicitly bars withholding records on the basis of embarrassment or political sensitivity. The move comes amid growing scrutiny of Epstein’s ties to powerful figures and renewed demands for accountability, even as questions linger about Trump’s motivations for this pivot and whether it signals a genuine commitment to transparency or a tactical retreat under mounting pressure.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:How Trump reversed course on the Epstein files as his administration faces lingering suspicion about their release | CNN PoliticsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Marras 15min

The Epstein Files: The DOJ Has the Crumbs, Langley Has the Cake (11/20/25)
Jeffrey Epstein’s story has long been framed as a failure of the Department of Justice, but the emerging picture suggests something far larger, deeper, and more strategically protected than bureaucratic incompetence. While the DOJ files may eventually expose mid-level accomplices and enablers—from recruiters to financial fixers—those records are widely seen as the leftovers, not the main course. The patterns surrounding Epstein’s rise, protection, wealth, connections, plea deals, and death point toward a man operating not as an independent criminal, but as an intelligence asset whose true handlers operated far above prosecutors and judges. The extraordinary legal shielding he enjoyed for decades, the global scope of his operation, and the immediate clampdown on information following his arrest and death align more with a covert intelligence compromise operation than with the actions of a rogue financier.Increasingly, investigators and observers argue that the CIA, not the DOJ, holds the real archive—tapes, testimonies, leverage files, operational memos, and the materials that could explain how a former prep-school math teacher became the center of a multinational blackmail network involving presidents, billionaires, royalty, and corporate and scientific elites. The stakes are not embarrassment, but system collapse: public acknowledgment that Epstein was a U.S.-built intelligence tool used to manufacture leverage over global power figures would undermine the myth of democratic control and reveal the extent of unelected power inside American governance. The pressure to release DOJ documents is important, but the real battlefield is Langley, where the answers to the central question—who built Jeffrey Epstein, and why—remain sealed behind national-security justifications. Until that vault opens, the truth remains incomplete, and accountability remains impossible.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Marras 22min

Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And The Deal That Never Materialized (11/20/25)
From the moment Ghislaine Maxwell was arrested in 2020, there was widespread speculation that she would eventually cut a deal with federal prosecutors. Many observers believed she held explosive information about Epstein’s most powerful associates—names that could devastate careers, shake institutions, and expose a sprawling web of enablers. The logic was simple: Maxwell was facing decades in prison, and prosecutors often rely on cooperation agreements to dismantle complex trafficking networks. The headlines, courtroom chatter, and legal commentators all echoed the same expectation—Maxwell would flip to save herself, and the public would finally learn the truth about who else participated, enabled, or benefited from Epstein’s criminal operation.But that deal never materialized, leaving many to question why. Throughout her trial and sentencing, Maxwell never publicly cooperated, never named names, and never provided the kind of testimonial firepower that so many assumed she possessed. Whether this silence was self-preservation, pressure from powerful figures, fear for her personal safety, or belief she could survive her sentence without betraying anyone remains a point of fierce debate. Ultimately, instead of becoming the prosecution’s star witness, Maxwell absorbed the full weight of her conviction and remains imprisoned without having triggered the broader reckoning many survivors, journalists, and the public expected. The absence of a cooperation deal has only intensified suspicion that the system was never truly willing to open that door.to contactme:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Marras 31min

Mega Edition: Stacey Plaskett Calls The Epstein Related Lawsuit Filed Against Her Frivolous (11/19/25)
Stacey Plaskett, the U.S. Virgin Islands delegate to the U.S. House, has called the civil lawsuit filed against her by six survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking scheme “frivolous.” In her motion seeking sanctions against the plaintiffs’ attorney, she described the accusations as “outright untruth, fiction and misrepresentation,” stating the attorney persisted with what she characterized as unfounded claims even after her legal team warned that continuing would trigger a Rule 11 motion.The lawsuit, originally filed in November 2023 and amended twice, alleged that Plaskett and other U.S. Virgin Islands officials helped facilitate Epstein’s trafficking operations, including through tax-break programs, fundraising, and other support. Plaskett denied all the allegations, and by August 2025 the case against her alone was voluntarily dismissed with prejudice, meaning it cannot be refiled.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Marras 37min

Les Wexner And The Many Dozens Of Times He Was Mentioned In Unsealed Epstein Documents
Les Wexner’s name appeared more than 45 times across previously unsealed court documents, depositions, and evidence connected to Jeffrey Epstein, placing him among the most frequently referenced figures in Epstein’s orbit. Those filings included references to his financial relationship with Epstein, the power of attorney he granted him, and Epstein’s control over significant assets tied to Wexner, including real estate. Survivors and witnesses named Wexner as part of Epstein’s network, identifying him as a key figure in the businessman’s rise and positioning within elite circles. The sheer volume of references across unsealed records emphasizes how deeply intertwined the two men were, particularly during the years in which Epstein built the infrastructure that enabled his crimes.Despite appearing repeatedly in sworn depositions and court materials, Wexner has never faced criminal charges connected to Epstein, and he publicly maintains ignorance of Epstein’s abuse and trafficking operation. However, the persistence of his name in legal filings continues to raise questions about how Epstein could have moved with such power and protection for decades without the awareness of those closest to him. The repeated mentions make it harder to sustain the narrative of distance or detachment and instead reinforce the perception that Epstein’s empire was built with the help of individuals who benefitted from his presence — and who have largely avoided accountability.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Marras 12min

Ghislaine Maxwell And The False Narrative She Presented About Her Time In Lock Up
In her filings and public statements, Ghislaine Maxwell asserted dire and inhumane conditions during her pre-trial detention at the Metropolitan Detention Center Brooklyn and later facilities. She claimed she was subject to excessive strip-searches, extremely poor food, sleep deprivation via constant lighting, raw sewage in her cell, missing legal paperwork, confiscation of attorney communications, and suffered weight loss and hair loss because of these conditions. These complaints were used to argue for her release or improved conditions, painting a picture of a woman under oppressive and degrading incarceration.However, prosecutors and facility records challenge many of Maxwell’s claims, labeling some as “falsehoods” advanced to generate public sympathy. They note that, unlike most detainees in her situation, she had access to a desktop computer, regular lawyer visits, phone and television access, and was housed in a special unit separate from the general population. Observers say the contrast between her allegations and documented privileges has raised doubts about the credibility of her narrative and suggests a strategic attempt to portray herself as a victim of unjust treatment rather than a convicted conspirator.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Marras 16min





















