JP Morgan Turns The Tables On The USVI And Points To Their Own Epstein Skeletons

JP Morgan Turns The Tables On The USVI And Points To Their Own Epstein Skeletons

JP Morgan publicly accused the U.S. Virgin Islands government of enabling Jeffrey Epstein by turning a blind eye to his criminal conduct while benefiting financially from his presence on the islands. In court filings responding to the USVI’s civil lawsuit against the bank, JP Morgan argued that local officials knew for years that Epstein was abusing underage girls at his Little St. James compound yet failed to act, despite repeated red flags. The bank pointed to Epstein’s close relationship with former USVI Governor John de Jongh Jr., including letters of support, favorable tax treatment, and political access, arguing that this cozy relationship helped insulate Epstein from scrutiny. JP Morgan framed the territory not as a victim of Epstein’s crimes, but as a willing participant that allowed him to operate freely in exchange for economic benefits.

JP Morgan further claimed that the USVI actively facilitated Epstein’s operations by failing to enforce its own laws, ignoring complaints, and allowing Epstein to maintain an airstrip, private security, and unrestricted travel despite widespread knowledge of his past criminal conduct. The bank alleged that if the USVI had intervened earlier—through law enforcement action, regulatory oversight, or even basic investigation—Epstein’s abuse network could have been disrupted long before his 2019 arrest. By advancing this argument, JP Morgan sought to shift liability away from itself and onto the territory, painting the lawsuit as an attempt by the USVI to rewrite history and deflect from its own role in protecting Epstein. The accusation laid bare an uncomfortable reality of the Epstein saga: that multiple institutions, including governments, may have knowingly tolerated his crimes when it was financially or politically convenient to do so.



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bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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The Unsealed Epstein Grand Jury Transcript From 2019 in New York (Part 5) (12/25/25)

The Unsealed Epstein Grand Jury Transcript From 2019 in New York (Part 5) (12/25/25)

The 2019 New York federal grand jury transcripts capture the final prosecutorial push that led to the arrest of Jeffrey Epstein on sex-trafficking charges in the Southern District of New York. The transcripts reflect prosecutors laying out a sweeping pattern of alleged conduct, including the recruitment and exploitation of underage girls, the use of intermediaries, and the systematic nature of the abuse network. Witness testimony, documentary evidence, and financial records were presented to establish probable cause, directly contradicting the long-standing narrative that Epstein was a lone offender whose crimes were limited to Florida. These proceedings culminated in the July 2019 indictment, marking the first time federal prosecutors in New York formally moved against Epstein despite years of prior allegations and investigative leads.The transcripts have now been newly unsealed under the Epstein Transparency Act, a move that has reignited scrutiny over what federal authorities knew—and when. Their release sheds light on investigative decisions, evidentiary thresholds, and the scope of information presented to the grand jury, while also highlighting gaps that critics argue point to earlier prosecutorial failures. Survivors and transparency advocates have emphasized that the unsealing is significant not only for what it reveals about Epstein’s conduct, but for what it exposes about institutional hesitation, delayed accountability, and the broader protection mechanisms that allowed Epstein to evade federal charges for years. While redactions remain, the disclosure represents a rare window into the mechanics of a case that many believe should have been brought long before 2019.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:EFTA00008529.pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 11min

Merry Christmas Everyone!   (12/25/25)

Merry Christmas Everyone! (12/25/25)

Merry Christmas to each and every one of you who takes the time to listen, think, question, and care. This time of year is about more than lights and traditions—it’s about gratitude, reflection, and the people who choose to stand with you when the noise gets loud and the truth gets uncomfortable. I don’t take for granted that you invite this work into your lives, your commutes, your late nights, or your quiet moments. Your attention, your messages, your support, and your willingness to stay engaged mean more than I can properly put into words.As the year winds down, I hope this Christmas gives you a moment of peace, connection, and grounding—whether that’s with family, friends, chosen family, or simply your own thoughts. Hold close what matters, protect your empathy, and don’t let the world harden you. Thank you for walking this road with me, for caring about accountability, and for refusing to look away. From my heart to yours, Merry Christmas, and here’s to staying sharp, human, and unafraid in the year ahead.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 9min

The Ghislaine Maxwell 2001 Police Complaint Nobody Acted On  (12/25/25)

The Ghislaine Maxwell 2001 Police Complaint Nobody Acted On (12/25/25)

Newly released documents from the U.S. Department of Justice tied to the Jeffrey Epstein investigation include a previously undisclosed 2001 Palm Beach Police Department complaint concerning Ghislaine Maxwell. According to the report, three female college students said Maxwell approached them about working at a residence in Palm Beach—identified as Epstein’s home—answering phones and doing “office work” for about $200 per day. One student described receiving calls regarding when “girls” were to be dropped off at the house, and at least two of the students reported Epstein touching them inappropriately. The women told police Maxwell was secretive about activities in the home and asked for contact information for other women who could be available on short notice. Police attempted follow-up but had trouble reaching the witnesses, though they did recover items from trash that included massage listings and lists of women with ages and descriptions. The report suggests early awareness of unusual and potentially exploitative conduct involving Epstein and Maxwell years before later investigations unfoldedThe existence of the 2001 complaint sheds light on a missed opportunity by law enforcement to intervene well before the broader Epstein sex trafficking ring became public and subject to federal scrutiny. It reveals that local authorities had received troubling firsthand accounts about Maxwell’s role in recruiting young women and about troubling behavior inside Epstein’s home, but the inquiry did not evolve into a more sustained or higher-level investigation at the time. The newly released documents raise questions about how early warnings were handled and whether more aggressive action might have prevented or curtailed the years of abuse that followed.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Years before Epstein came under investigation in Palm Beach, local police got tip about Maxwell - ABC NewsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 13min

Mega Edition:   Jes Staley And His Dramatic  Fall Due To His Relationship With Epstein (12/25/25)

Mega Edition: Jes Staley And His Dramatic Fall Due To His Relationship With Epstein (12/25/25)

The downfall of Jes Staley traces back to his long-running professional and personal relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, which resurfaced publicly years after Epstein’s crimes became widely known. While serving as CEO of Barclays, regulators began scrutinizing the extent to which Staley had been transparent about the relationship, including email contact that continued after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Staley initially characterized Epstein as a limited professional acquaintance, but subsequent disclosures—particularly emails referring to Epstein as a “trusted friend”—undermined that account and raised concerns about candor and judgment at the highest levels of the bank.In 2021, UK regulators concluded that Staley had mischaracterized the nature of his ties to Epstein, leading to his forced resignation from Barclays and a formal investigation into whether he had misled the board and regulators. The episode effectively ended Staley’s career at the top tier of global banking and later followed him into litigation, including a lawsuit by JPMorgan Chase, where he had previously worked and overseen the Epstein relationship. Staley has argued that institutions used him as a scapegoat for broader failures, but the reputational damage proved decisive: his association with Epstein became inseparable from questions of credibility, oversight, and accountability—turning a once-powerful banking executive into one of the most prominent professional casualties of the Epstein scandal.to contact  me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 32min

Mega Edition:   Jeffrey Epstein And The Homicidal Maniac He Was Celled Up  With (12/25/25)

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Homicidal Maniac He Was Celled Up With (12/25/25)

Putting Nicholas Tartaglione—a former cop facing a serious violent case—into the same cell as Jeffrey Epstein has always looked like a decision that begs for more explanation than the system ever really gave. The official framing leans on routine housing pressures and standard placement decisions at MCC, but that’s hard to square with Epstein’s status as the most high-profile detainee in the building, under intense scrutiny, with known safety and suicide-risk concerns. What makes it even messier is that after Epstein was found injured in his cell, internal documentation reflects that Epstein told staff his cellmate tried to kill him—a claim that directly contradicts any “nothing to see here” tone about the housing choice. Even if officials later described the episode as murky, disputed, or consistent with self-harm, the fact remains: the inmate at the center of the most sensitive federal custody situation in America ended up in a cell with a man the public would never describe as “low-risk,” and then immediately said he’d been attacked.And that’s where the “official narrative” keeps running into its own credibility problem: it asks the public to accept a chain of extraordinary coincidences inside a facility later shown to be riddled with procedural failures. If Epstein’s account is taken seriously, then the placement decision and the response protocols become the story—because it would mean the Bureau of Prisons put him in a situation where he could plausibly be harmed, and then had to manage the fallout. If Epstein’s account is not taken seriously, then the obvious question is why the system tolerated ambiguity at all—why key surveillance gaps, inconsistent supervision practices, and the broader MCC breakdowns left so much room for competing explanations. Either way, the housing choice looks less like a neutral administrative call and more like a decision that created maximum risk with minimum transparency, followed by a public-facing story that never fully resolved the most basic issue: why was this pairing allowed in the first place, and why did Epstein immediately say he’d been assaulted?to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 1h 5min

Mega Edition:   The Unsealed Palm Beach County Police Report Into Jeffrey Epstein (Part 16-17) (12/24/25)

Mega Edition: The Unsealed Palm Beach County Police Report Into Jeffrey Epstein (Part 16-17) (12/24/25)

The Palm Beach police report reads like the opening chapter of a crime saga everyone wishes had ended sooner. In painstaking detail, investigators laid out how Jeffrey Epstein operated a revolving-door abuse scheme out of his Palm Beach mansion—recruiting underage girls, often as young as 14, under the guise of “massages,” then paying them cash after sexual assaults. The report makes clear this was not a one-off or a misunderstanding; it documents dozens of consistent victim statements, matching descriptions of the house, the routine, the money, and Epstein’s behavior. Detectives noted the sheer volume of victims, the striking similarities in their accounts, and the methodical nature of the abuse—painting a picture of a predator who acted with confidence, repetition, and a belief he would never face consequences.What makes the report so haunting is not just what Epstein did, but how unmistakably obvious it all was. The Palm Beach Police Department concluded there was overwhelming probable cause for felony sex crimes, emphasizing that Epstein’s wealth, influence, and legal maneuvering stood in sharp contrast to the credibility and courage of the girls who came forward. The document reads less like a mystery and more like a warning flare—one that spelled out the scope of the abuse long before the world was forced to confront it. In black and white, the report shows that the truth was there early, detailed, and undeniable—raising the uncomfortable question of why it took so long for justice to even begin catching up.to contact me:bobbycapuccisource:Epstein-Docs.pdf (documentcloud.org)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 27min

Mega Edition:   The Unsealed Palm Beach County Police Report Into Jeffrey Epstein (Part 13-15) (12/24/25)

Mega Edition: The Unsealed Palm Beach County Police Report Into Jeffrey Epstein (Part 13-15) (12/24/25)

The Palm Beach police report reads like the opening chapter of a crime saga everyone wishes had ended sooner. In painstaking detail, investigators laid out how Jeffrey Epstein operated a revolving-door abuse scheme out of his Palm Beach mansion—recruiting underage girls, often as young as 14, under the guise of “massages,” then paying them cash after sexual assaults. The report makes clear this was not a one-off or a misunderstanding; it documents dozens of consistent victim statements, matching descriptions of the house, the routine, the money, and Epstein’s behavior. Detectives noted the sheer volume of victims, the striking similarities in their accounts, and the methodical nature of the abuse—painting a picture of a predator who acted with confidence, repetition, and a belief he would never face consequences.What makes the report so haunting is not just what Epstein did, but how unmistakably obvious it all was. The Palm Beach Police Department concluded there was overwhelming probable cause for felony sex crimes, emphasizing that Epstein’s wealth, influence, and legal maneuvering stood in sharp contrast to the credibility and courage of the girls who came forward. The document reads less like a mystery and more like a warning flare—one that spelled out the scope of the abuse long before the world was forced to confront it. In black and white, the report shows that the truth was there early, detailed, and undeniable—raising the uncomfortable question of why it took so long for justice to even begin catching up.to contact me:bobbycapuccisource:Epstein-Docs.pdf (documentcloud.org)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 42min

The Cabin On The Campus Of Interlochen And It's Creepiest Guest Jeffrey  Epstein

The Cabin On The Campus Of Interlochen And It's Creepiest Guest Jeffrey Epstein

In the late 1990s, Jeffrey Epstein donated money to the Interlochen Center for the Arts in Michigan, a relationship that later drew scrutiny after it was revealed he had access to a private cabin on or near the Interlochen campus. Reporting and survivor accounts indicate Epstein used the cabin while visiting the school, raising serious concerns about safeguarding and oversight, particularly given what is now known about his long-running pattern of sexual abuse of minors. At the time, Epstein was presented as a wealthy patron of the arts, and there is no evidence that Interlochen officials were publicly aware of the full scope of his criminal behavior, which had not yet been exposed.Critics argue, however, that the arrangement exemplifies how elite institutions failed to apply adequate due diligence or enforce strict boundaries when accepting money and access from powerful donors. While Interlochen has stated that it has no evidence abuse occurred on its campus and that it severed ties with Epstein once his crimes became public, the episode has continued to trouble survivors and advocates as a case study in institutional blind spots. The presence of a secluded cabin connected to Epstein, in a setting dedicated to young students, has become part of the broader reckoning over how Epstein leveraged philanthropy and cultural credibility to embed himself in environments that demanded far greater scrutiny than they received.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Des 13min

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