Jes Staley Goes On The Attack And Reports Of A Cache Of Epstein Videos And Photos

Jes Staley Goes On The Attack And Reports Of A Cache Of Epstein Videos And Photos

Reports indicate that newly unsealed court records reveal Jeffrey Epstein’s estate discovered a previously unknown cache of videos and photographs that may contain highly sensitive or potentially illegal material. According to the filings, the estate alerted federal authorities and legal representatives for survivors once the cache was located, and the material is now being reviewed under restricted access. The revelation has raised immediate questions about how such evidence remained undiscovered during prior raids and investigations, and why it is only surfacing years after Epstein’s death, despite the public insistence that all relevant materials were already collected by law enforcement.

These reports also note that the discovery aligns with long-standing claims from survivors and insiders that Epstein systematically recorded activities inside his properties, allegedly capturing compromising encounters involving high-profile individuals. Advocates have argued for years that Epstein used surveillance as leverage and protection, and the existence of a hidden archive intensifies speculation about who may be depicted on the recovered media. The finding further fuels concerns about transparency, chain of custody, and the possibility that critical evidence was concealed, misplaced, or withheld, leaving the public once again questioning whether the full truth surrounding Epstein’s network has ever genuinely been revealed.


Former Barclays CEO Jes Staley and his legal team forcefully rejected allegations made by JPMorgan Chase, describing them as “slanderous” and “baseless but serious.” The dispute emerged during litigation in Manhattan, where lawsuits filed by the U.S. Virgin Islands and a survivor identified as Jane Doe 1 accused Staley of having closely associated with Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking network, including claims that he exchanged hundreds of emails with Epstein containing disturbing content. Staley’s lawyers argued that the accelerated trial schedule was unnecessary and unfair, insisting that he had been given insufficient time to prepare an adequate defense. JPMorgan, in turn, pursued legal action against Staley, seeking to recover compensation and asserting that he was central to decisions that allowed Epstein to operate as a client for years. The bank maintained that Staley was “inextricably linked” to the case, pointing to his long relationship with Epstein dating back to his tenure at JPMorgan in the early 2000s. Staley ultimately resigned as CEO of Barclays in 2021 amid scrutiny from UK regulators over his Epstein ties, and the legal confrontation highlighted the reputational fallout and lingering uncertainty surrounding the financial institutions and executives connected to Epstein’s network.


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bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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Peter Mandelson Is Recalled From His Post By  U.K. Authorities Over His Jeffrey Epstein Lies  (9/11/25)

Peter Mandelson Is Recalled From His Post By U.K. Authorities Over His Jeffrey Epstein Lies (9/11/25)

Peter Mandelson’s fall from grace is almost too absurd to believe. The U.K.’s ambassador to the United States wasn’t forced out over a failed negotiation or a diplomatic blunder—he was fired because newly revealed emails showed him gushing over Jeffrey Epstein like a schoolboy writing in a yearbook. Mandelson called Epstein’s 2008 conviction “wrongful,” encouraged him to “fight for early release,” and, in perhaps the most humiliating phrase ever preserved in an email archive, referred to him as his “best pal.” For a man tasked with projecting dignity, authority, and credibility on the world stage, this wasn’t just poor judgment—it was career suicide committed in Microsoft Outlook.Prime Minister Keir Starmer wasted no time tossing Mandelson overboard. There was no drawn-out inquiry, no half-hearted defense—just a swift political guillotine once the “best pal” emails surfaced. And that’s the scandal’s grim comedy: it doesn’t need elaborate explanation, because it speaks for itself. A man who spent decades surviving scandals, outmaneuvering rivals, and clinging to power was undone not by policy or politics, but by his own embarrassing loyalty to a convicted predator. In the end, Mandelson’s career won’t be remembered for his diplomacy or his political acumen—it will be remembered for the cringe-inducing words that turned him from ambassador into punchline.to  contact  me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 13min

Ghislaine Maxell And Her New Found Narrative Of Innocence Gets Nuked By New Emails (9/11/25)

Ghislaine Maxell And Her New Found Narrative Of Innocence Gets Nuked By New Emails (9/11/25)

The newly surfaced Epstein–Maxwell emails destroy the carefully maintained image that Ghislaine Maxwell was little more than a bystander in Epstein’s orbit. The sheer volume of correspondence—thousands of messages, including more than 200 in the months just before Epstein’s 2008 indictment—shows her still playing an active, managerial role long after she claimed to have distanced herself. These aren’t the casual check-ins of someone who drifted away; they read like the operational lifeline of a fixer who was deeply entangled, ensuring Epstein’s logistics, staff, and image were being tightly managed as his legal peril mounted. The reality is clear: instead of retreating when the walls closed in, Maxwell remained inside the command center, working shoulder to shoulder with Epstein while he scrambled to preserve his empire.Other evidence only compounds the contradictions. Maxwell has repeatedly insisted she never saw abuse, never witnessed a “client list,” and was unaware of any wrongdoing, yet the new material—emails, the infamous birthday book, and corroborating records—paint a different picture. They show her acting as the connective tissue in Epstein’s network, coordinating travel, arranging connections, and maintaining contact even as his predation became impossible to deny. Against this backdrop, her courtroom narrative of innocence collapses into absurdity. The disclosures don’t just raise questions about her credibility—they obliterate it, exposing her as an active, deliberate participant who helped sustain the machinery of Epstein’s operation rather than some unfortunate bystander swept along by events.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Epstein emails reveal deep secrets: Maxwell knew what he did, Trump figures 3 times, says report – FirstpostBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 16min

Morning Update:  A Trip Around The Jeffrey Epstein Headlines (9/11/25)

Morning Update: A Trip Around The Jeffrey Epstein Headlines (9/11/25)

The latest Epstein fallout played out on both sides of the Atlantic, exposing the same tired playbook of elites protecting their own. In Britain, Ambassador Peter Mandelson was sacked after leaked emails revealed he described Epstein as his “best pal” and defended his conviction as “wrongful.” Across the U.S., Senate Republicans blocked a Democratic measure to release Epstein’s case files, hiding behind “national security” while proving once again that child-protection rhetoric vanishes when real accountability is on the line. Meanwhile, newly leaked emails from Epstein’s Yahoo account demolished Ghislaine Maxwell’s courtroom defense, showing her not as a victim but as the COO of his trafficking operation—micromanaging flights, properties, and staff like it was a corporate empireTogether, these stories show that nothing has really changed since Epstein’s death. Politicians feign outrage, the press acts surprised, and the powerful keep burying the truth. Mandelson will quietly resurface, the Senate will keep stonewalling, and Maxwell’s receipts will fade into the next news cycle. Survivors remain sidelined while the system that built and protected Epstein carries on intact. What’s sold to the public as accountability is really just theater—carefully staged scandals, controlled leaks, and token sacrifices to keep the machinery of power untouched. Epstein may be gone, but the joke is still on us.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 14min

What The Epstein Birthday Book Really Says About the People Who Rule Us (Part 2) (9/11/25)

What The Epstein Birthday Book Really Says About the People Who Rule Us (Part 2) (9/11/25)

Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday book is far more than a grotesque artifact—it’s a rare glimpse into how the ruling class truly thinks when they believe no one is watching. The notes and jokes scrawled by high-profile figures weren’t cautious or sanitized; they were brazen, mocking, and disturbingly casual about Epstein’s depravity. These weren’t random signatures but names tied to politics, finance, media, and culture—the very people who shape the systems we live under. In their own handwriting, stripped of handlers and stagecraft, they revealed a mindset of entitlement and impunity, a belief that rules are for the powerless, while the elite exist above morality and consequence.The real lesson isn’t about Epstein himself, but about the world that enabled him. The book exposes a class that laughs at the darkest crimes, shields one another from accountability, and thrives while the public tears itself apart over endless distractions. We’ve been set against each other by design, too busy fighting culture wars to notice the true enemy: the predator class whose names fill those pages. The birthday book pulls the curtain back, showing us that the divide isn’t left versus right, but them versus us—and unless we recognize that bigger picture, the joke remains on us.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 16min

What The Epstein Birthday Book Really Says About the People Who Rule Us (Part 1) (9/11/25)

What The Epstein Birthday Book Really Says About the People Who Rule Us (Part 1) (9/11/25)

Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday book is far more than a grotesque artifact—it’s a rare glimpse into how the ruling class truly thinks when they believe no one is watching. The notes and jokes scrawled by high-profile figures weren’t cautious or sanitized; they were brazen, mocking, and disturbingly casual about Epstein’s depravity. These weren’t random signatures but names tied to politics, finance, media, and culture—the very people who shape the systems we live under. In their own handwriting, stripped of handlers and stagecraft, they revealed a mindset of entitlement and impunity, a belief that rules are for the powerless, while the elite exist above morality and consequence.The real lesson isn’t about Epstein himself, but about the world that enabled him. The book exposes a class that laughs at the darkest crimes, shields one another from accountability, and thrives while the public tears itself apart over endless distractions. We’ve been set against each other by design, too busy fighting culture wars to notice the true enemy: the predator class whose names fill those pages. The birthday book pulls the curtain back, showing us that the divide isn’t left versus right, but them versus us—and unless we recognize that bigger picture, the joke remains on us.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 16min

Mega Edition:  Day Number 11 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (9/10/25)

Mega Edition: Day Number 11 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (9/10/25)

The Ghislaine Maxwell trial, held in late 2021 in federal court in New York, centered on her alleged role as Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirator in a sex trafficking ring that preyed on underage girls for over a decade. Prosecutors accused Maxwell of grooming minors, gaining their trust, and then facilitating or participating in their abuse at the hands of Epstein between 1994 and 2004. The government’s case included testimony from four women, some of whom described in painful detail how Maxwell recruited them as teenagers under the guise of mentorship or financial assistance, only to manipulate them into sexual encounters with Epstein. Flight logs, photographs, and household staff testimony were used to place Maxwell at various Epstein properties and show her long-standing involvement in his lifestyle and operations.Maxwell’s defense team attempted to cast her as a scapegoat, arguing that she was being punished for Epstein’s crimes following his 2019 death in federal custody. They challenged the credibility of the accusers, questioned their motives, and pointed to the time gaps between the alleged crimes and the trial. Ultimately, the jury found Maxwell guilty on five of six federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor, and not guilty on one count of enticing a minor to travel for illegal sex acts. The conviction marked a rare moment of accountability in a case that had long been plagued by cover-ups, prosecutorial failures, and elite protection. It also opened the door to further scrutiny of Epstein’s network, although many key figures remain untouched.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comThe Ghislaine Maxwell trial, held in late 2021 in federal court in New York, centered on her alleged role as Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirator in a sex trafficking ring that preyed on underage girls for over a decade. Prosecutors accused Maxwell of grooming minors, gaining their trust, and then facilitating or participating in their abuse at the hands of Epstein between 1994 and 2004. The government’s case included testimony from four women, some of whom described in painful detail how Maxwell recruited them as teenagers under the guise of mentorship or financial assistance, only to manipulate them into sexual encounters with Epstein. Flight logs, photographs, and household staff testimony were used to place Maxwell at various Epstein properties and show her long-standing involvement in his lifestyle and operations.Maxwell’s defense team attempted to cast her as a scapegoat, arguing that she was being punished for Epstein’s crimes following his 2019 death in federal custody. They challenged the credibility of the accusers, questioned their motives, and pointed to the time gaps between the alleged crimes and the trial. Ultimately, the jury found Maxwell guilty on five of six federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor, and not guilty on one count of enticing a minor to travel for illegal sex acts. The conviction marked a rare moment of accountability in a case that had long been plagued by cover-ups, prosecutorial failures, and elite protection. It also opened the door to further scrutiny of Epstein’s network, although many key figures remain untouched.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 39min

Mega Edition:  Day Number 10 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (9/10/25)

Mega Edition: Day Number 10 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (9/10/25)

The Ghislaine Maxwell trial, held in late 2021 in federal court in New York, centered on her alleged role as Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirator in a sex trafficking ring that preyed on underage girls for over a decade. Prosecutors accused Maxwell of grooming minors, gaining their trust, and then facilitating or participating in their abuse at the hands of Epstein between 1994 and 2004. The government’s case included testimony from four women, some of whom described in painful detail how Maxwell recruited them as teenagers under the guise of mentorship or financial assistance, only to manipulate them into sexual encounters with Epstein. Flight logs, photographs, and household staff testimony were used to place Maxwell at various Epstein properties and show her long-standing involvement in his lifestyle and operations.Maxwell’s defense team attempted to cast her as a scapegoat, arguing that she was being punished for Epstein’s crimes following his 2019 death in federal custody. They challenged the credibility of the accusers, questioned their motives, and pointed to the time gaps between the alleged crimes and the trial. Ultimately, the jury found Maxwell guilty on five of six federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor, and not guilty on one count of enticing a minor to travel for illegal sex acts. The conviction marked a rare moment of accountability in a case that had long been plagued by cover-ups, prosecutorial failures, and elite protection. It also opened the door to further scrutiny of Epstein’s network, although many key figures remain untouched.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 47min

Mega Edition:  Day Number 9 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (9/10/25)

Mega Edition: Day Number 9 Of The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (9/10/25)

The Ghislaine Maxwell trial, held in late 2021 in federal court in New York, centered on her alleged role as Jeffrey Epstein’s co-conspirator in a sex trafficking ring that preyed on underage girls for over a decade. Prosecutors accused Maxwell of grooming minors, gaining their trust, and then facilitating or participating in their abuse at the hands of Epstein between 1994 and 2004. The government’s case included testimony from four women, some of whom described in painful detail how Maxwell recruited them as teenagers under the guise of mentorship or financial assistance, only to manipulate them into sexual encounters with Epstein. Flight logs, photographs, and household staff testimony were used to place Maxwell at various Epstein properties and show her long-standing involvement in his lifestyle and operations.Maxwell’s defense team attempted to cast her as a scapegoat, arguing that she was being punished for Epstein’s crimes following his 2019 death in federal custody. They challenged the credibility of the accusers, questioned their motives, and pointed to the time gaps between the alleged crimes and the trial. Ultimately, the jury found Maxwell guilty on five of six federal charges, including sex trafficking of a minor, and not guilty on one count of enticing a minor to travel for illegal sex acts. The conviction marked a rare moment of accountability in a case that had long been plagued by cover-ups, prosecutorial failures, and elite protection. It also opened the door to further scrutiny of Epstein’s network, although many key figures remain untouched.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

11 Sep 32min

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