
Disgraced Prince Andrew Calls The Allegations By Virginia Roberts Vague In Court Documents
In early 2022, Andrew’s attorneys filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, contending that Giuffre’s complaint did not “articulate what supposedly happened” with sufficient detail. They argued the claims were too general — lacking precise dates, clear descriptions of where alleged events occurred, and specific conduct — which, they said, made it impossible for Andrew to respond meaningfully or defend himself. This line of attack framed the allegations as legally insufficient because they allegedly failed to meet the standards required to bring a viable civil case.The court rejected that argument. A federal judge overseeing the case found that Giuffre had provided enough detail — about timing (early 2000s), locations (including a London residence and properties tied to Jeffrey Epstein), and context (her status as a minor and trafficking victim) — to allow the lawsuit to proceed. The judge ruled that the complaint was not “too vague” to survive a motion to dismiss, meaning that Giuffre’s core claims had been sufficiently described to proceed toward discovery or resolution.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
4 Des 22min

Leon Black Drags Mort Zuckerman Into His Lawsuit
After legal pressure mounted on Black for his close relationship with Epstein — including revelations that Black paid Epstein tens of millions of dollars for “tax and estate planning” even after Epstein’s 2008 conviction — new lawsuits and investigations began to cast a wider net. Among those subpoenaed in a broad civil case against financial institutions linked to Epstein was Zuckerman, as part of efforts to trace the money trails and financial networks that may have funded or facilitated Epstein’s enterprise. The inclusion of Zuckerman’s name signaled a legal strategy aiming to pull in other wealthy associates and financiers who might have had business or financial exposure to Epstein — effectively broadening liability beyond Black.Black’s own legal maneuvers complicated matters further. While he faced civil lawsuits (for alleged sexual misconduct) and regulatory scrutiny over his payments to Epstein, the broader legal actions — including suits against banks and other financial players — sought to implicate individuals like Zuckerman in chains of financial relationships tied to Epstein’s operations. By doing this, Black’s case became not just about his personal associations, but part of a larger legal attempt to map and hold accountable the network of affluent, high-profile individuals and institutions whose money may have indirectly supported Epstein’s activities.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
3 Des 34min

The Survivors Class Action That Exposed JP Morgan's Ties To Epstein (Part 7) (12/3/25)
In the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, a class action lawsuit titled Jane Doe 1, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated v. JP Morgan Chase & Co. was filed. The complaint represented not only Jane Doe 1, but a broader group of alleged victims who claimed they suffered harm tied to the actions—and alleged inaction—of JP Morgan Chase & Co. The filing formally demanded a jury trial, signaling the plaintiffs’ intention to take the allegations into open court rather than resolve them quietly behind closed doors.The case was framed as both an individual and a class action complaint, raising the stakes considerably for the financial giant. By categorizing it this way, the plaintiffs positioned their claims as part of a larger systemic issue involving an entire group of alleged victims. The filing marked the beginning of what later became one of the most scrutinized legal battles connected to the Jeffrey Epstein network, setting the stage for intense public inquiry into the bank’s role and potential liability.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Microsoft Word - 00513854.DOCXBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
3 Des 11min

Trumpworld’s Overlap: Kushner’s Invitation to Jeffrey Epstein In 2013 (12/3/25)
In 2013, Jared Kushner extended an invitation to Jeffrey Epstein for a Trump family event, a move that looks worse with every passing year and every new revelation. By that point, Epstein wasn’t some misunderstood financier or eccentric recluse. He was a convicted sex offender whose crimes were well-documented, widely reported, and inexcusable. Yet somehow, he still made the guest list for an event tied directly to one of the most image-obsessed families in American public life. Kushner’s spokesperson later tried to claim that Epstein never attended and that Kushner had never even met him, but the invitation alone exposes a damning level of proximity. It reveals a world where a man like Epstein still had enough social currency to be casually ushered toward the inner orbit of political royalty.What makes this even more infuriating is how aggressively people have tried to memory-hole this detail. Epstein wasn’t invited by some random cousin or a clueless PR assistant. He received an invitation linked to the husband of Ivanka Trump—someone who was not only a member of the family but a rising political strategist shaping the future of the Republican Party. Kushner’s attempt to distance himself after the fact doesn’t erase the paper trail or the undeniable truth that Epstein was still circulating among power brokers long after his conviction. It underscores a much larger pattern: the powerful knew exactly who Epstein was, and they still opened their doors for him. That is what makes the 2013 invitation so damning, and why no amount of post-hoc denial can scrub the stain of it.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Jared Kushner's company invited Jeffrey Epstein to star-studded NYC party with Trump and Harvey Weinstein | Daily Mail OnlineBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
3 Des 12min

Disgraced Prince Andrew Is Stripped Of His Last Title (12/3/25)
Prince Andrew being stripped of the Order of the Garter marked one of the most severe and humiliating blows the Royal Family has dealt him yet. The Order of the Garter is not just any accolade. It is the oldest and most prestigious chivalric order in the United Kingdom, reserved for monarchs, prime ministers, and figures of national significance. Losing it wasn’t simply a matter of public relations. It was the Royal Family publicly acknowledging that Andrew’s entanglement with Jeffrey Epstein was no longer something they could distance themselves from with polite statements or vague platitudes. This was a symbolic execution: the monarchy cutting away a limb that had become too infected, too toxic, too indefensible to keep attached.The decision also made it abundantly clear that Andrew’s days of skating by on privilege were over. For decades, he lived as though the rules applied only to the peasants, never to him. But once the Epstein revelations reached a boiling point and the public recoil became impossible to ignore, even the Palace had to abandon the fantasy that Andrew could be rehabilitated through a carefully staged interview or a temporary retreat from public life. Stripping him of the Garter was the monarchy admitting, without saying it out loud, that he is a liability. A fallen prince, tarnished beyond repair, and a cautionary tale of what happens when scandal finally outweighs lineage.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:King Charles strips Prince Andrew of his final royal titles amid scandal | Fox NewsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
3 Des 12min

A Man for All Governments: Epstein’s Multidirectional Loyalties (12/3/25)
Many people latch onto the idea that Jeffrey Epstein was simply a Mossad asset, but that narrow framing ignores the vast, tangled reality of how he operated. Epstein absolutely interacted with Israeli intelligence at times, but he was far from a one-nation operative. The emails, correspondence, and contacts that have surfaced reveal a man functioning as a geopolitical free agent—someone who cultivated influence with the British Royal Family, served as a broker between Russia and Western power players, embedded himself in Wall Street and academia, and navigated U.S. political circles with ease. His value came from his ambiguity. He was a dealer of access, leverage, and kompromat who aligned himself with any faction—American, British, Russian, Israeli, or otherwise—that furthered his personal agenda. Viewing Epstein as a single-country asset grossly oversimplifies a transnational operation that spanned governments, intelligence networks, and private power structures.The fixation on Mossad serves as a distraction that conveniently shields the many other institutions and elites who benefitted from Epstein’s activities. Reducing his network to a single foreign intelligence service allows U.S. political figures, European royalty, Wall Street executives, global banks, and academic power centers to slide out of the frame. It masks the deeper truth that Epstein was part of a multinational ecosystem of private influence that operated parallel to, and often above, governments. His power came from the kompromat he accumulated across continents, the secrets he mediated, and the access he controlled—making him dangerous not because he served one nation, but because he served himself. Simplifying him to a Mossad agent is not only inaccurate; it protects the sprawling network of global power players who enabled him and had every incentive to silence him before the full truth emerged.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
3 Des 11min

Mega Edition: Why Were Portions Of The Maxwell Jury Selection Process Kept Sealed? (12/3/25)
The secrecy surrounding portions of the jury-selection process in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial became a point of controversy even before opening statements began. Maxwell’s legal team pushed aggressively to keep the written juror questionnaires and parts of the voir-dire process sealed from public view, arguing that the overwhelming media coverage and intense global interest could intimidate potential jurors and prevent them from answering truthfully. They claimed that only a private process could protect jurors from harassment and ensure fairness, effectively requesting an unprecedented level of confidentiality for a trial that was already under scrutiny for years of secrecy surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s conduct and the government’s handling of the case.This request was met with resistance from press organizations and transparency advocates, who argued that sealing juror questionnaires would undermine public trust in the judicial process and contradict the longstanding legal principle that jury selection should be open to public observation. The judge ultimately rejected the bid for an entirely closed process, but aspects of the selection — including the identities of jurors and the contents of certain responses — remained shielded. That decision fueled accusations that secrecy was being selectively deployed, especially after it emerged post-trial that a sitting juror had failed to disclose a history of sexual abuse on his questionnaire. The dispute highlighted the tension between protecting juror privacy and the public’s demand for full transparency in a case already marred by distrust and decades of hidden information.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
3 Des 37min





















