Epstein Files Unsealed:  An NYPD Detective Gives Testimony To The Maxwell Grand Jury In 2021 (Part 7) (1/8/26)

Epstein Files Unsealed: An NYPD Detective Gives Testimony To The Maxwell Grand Jury In 2021 (Part 7) (1/8/26)

In the lead-up to Ghislaine Maxwell’s indictment and eventual arrest, a wide range of law enforcement agents representing multiple agencies were brought before the grand jury to lay out the evidentiary foundation of the case. Their testimony reflected a coordinated federal effort that had been building quietly for years, drawing on investigative work from different jurisdictions, timelines, and investigative lanes. Agents walked jurors through financial records, travel logs, victim accounts, electronic communications, and corroborating witness statements, showing how Maxwell functioned not as a peripheral figure, but as a central facilitator in Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking operation. The cumulative effect of this testimony was to establish pattern, intent, and continuity—demonstrating that Maxwell’s actions were not isolated or accidental, but deliberate, repeated, and essential to the enterprise prosecutors were preparing to charge.

In this episode, we take a close, methodical look at that grand jury testimony and what it reveals about how the case against Maxwell was constructed. By examining how different agencies’ witnesses reinforced one another’s findings, the episode highlights how prosecutors built a layered narrative designed to withstand both legal scrutiny and defense attacks. The testimony shows how long-standing investigative threads were finally pulled together after Epstein’s death, transforming years of fragmented information into a cohesive criminal case. Rather than focusing on speculation or hindsight, this episode zeroes in on the mechanics of the prosecution itself—how law enforcement presented the evidence, why the grand jury ultimately moved forward, and how that testimony paved the way for Maxwell’s arrest and indictment.



to contact me:

bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



source:

EFTA00008744.pdf

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

Episoder(1000)

"We Don’t Trust the DOJ”: Inside the Push for a Special Master Over Epstein Records (1/9/26)

"We Don’t Trust the DOJ”: Inside the Push for a Special Master Over Epstein Records (1/9/26)

Reps. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) and Thomas Massie (R-Ky.), the bipartisan sponsors of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, have formally asked a federal judge to appoint a special master or independent monitor to oversee the Justice Department’s release of files related to Jeffrey Epstein. Their request comes after the DOJ missed the law’s December 19, 2025 deadline to make the documents public and has released only a small fraction of what it says is a multi-million document trove. In a letter to U.S. District Judge Paul Engelmayer, Khanna and Massie argue that the DOJ’s slow pace, extensive redactions, and failure to submit legally required reports to Congress undermine compliance with the statute and could further traumatize survivors. They want a neutral third party empowered to assess whether the department is fully complying with the law and identify any improper redactions or other questionable conduct.The lawmakers have emphasized their lack of confidence in the DOJ’s ability to self-police this process and contend that without court-appointed oversight, full disclosure is unlikely. In their filing, they highlight inconsistencies in the DOJ’s reported figures on released versus remaining documents, and they stress that the department “cannot be trusted with making mandatory disclosures under the Act.” Massie has also threatened contempt proceedings against Attorney General Pam Bondi for ongoing noncompliance. By urging judicial intervention through a special master, Khanna and Massie aim to ensure the transparency envisioned by their law and compel the release of the full set of Epstein-related records despite departmental resistance.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:US congressmen ask judge to appoint official to force release of all Epstein files | Jeffrey Epstein | The GuardianBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 11min

Too Big for RICO: How Epstein Escaped the One Law Built to Destroy Criminal Empires (1/9/26)

Too Big for RICO: How Epstein Escaped the One Law Built to Destroy Criminal Empires (1/9/26)

It makes no coherent sense that federal prosecutors reached for RICO in the cases of Sean “Diddy” Combs, R. Kelly, and Keith Raniere, yet refused to apply the same framework to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell—a pair whose conduct fits the statute more cleanly than almost any modern defendant. RICO is designed to dismantle criminal enterprises that rely on networks, enablers, financial infrastructure, and ongoing patterns of illegal activity. Epstein’s operation was exactly that: a long-running trafficking enterprise spanning multiple states and countries, involving recruiters, schedulers, pilots, accountants, lawyers, shell companies, and complicit financial institutions. Ghislaine Maxwell was not merely an associate; she was a central manager who procured victims, enforced compliance, and maintained the machinery that allowed the abuse to continue for decades. By any objective comparison, Epstein’s organization was more structured, more durable, and more dependent on coordinated criminal activity than the enterprises alleged in the Diddy, R. Kelly, or NXIVM cases.The only explanation that accounts for this disparity is not legal logic, but institutional avoidance. A RICO case against Epstein and Maxwell would have required prosecutors to identify and pursue co-conspirators, financial facilitators, and upstream beneficiaries—names that extend far beyond the two defendants who were ultimately charged. Instead, the government chose narrow counts that isolated culpability, limited discovery, and minimized exposure of third parties, even as it aggressively used RICO elsewhere to sweep in assistants, employees, and peripheral figures. The result is a prosecutorial contradiction that undermines confidence in equal application of the law: RICO when the targets are disposable, restraint when the targets implicate power, money, and institutions. If RICO was appropriate for Diddy’s logistics, R. Kelly’s entourage, or Raniere’s inner circle, then its absence in the Epstein-Maxwell prosecution isn’t a legal judgment—it’s a decision to stop the case before it reached the people who mattered most.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 19min

Who’s Watching the Watchmen? Calls Grow for an IG Probe Into the DOJ’s Epstein File Delay (1/9/26)

Who’s Watching the Watchmen? Calls Grow for an IG Probe Into the DOJ’s Epstein File Delay (1/9/26)

Calls for the Department of Justice’s Inspector General to step in and investigate the handling of the Epstein files release have intensified as delays, contradictions, and shifting explanations continue to pile up. What began as cautious skepticism has hardened into open frustration from lawmakers, transparency advocates, and legal experts who argue that the DOJ’s conduct no longer passes the smell test. Despite Congress passing legislation mandating disclosure, the DOJ has repeatedly claimed it needs years to review and redact millions of documents—an assertion that critics say directly conflicts with the government’s long-standing position that Epstein was thoroughly investigated years ago. If the material was already reviewed, categorized, and litigated over in past prosecutions and civil cases, the argument goes, then the idea that it suddenly requires a near-decade scrub looks less like due diligence and more like institutional stalling.As a result, pressure has mounted for the Inspector General to examine whether the DOJ is acting in good faith or deliberately slow-walking compliance to shield itself from embarrassment, exposure, or liability. Lawmakers have raised concerns that the department may be protecting its own past misconduct—failed prosecutions, ignored evidence, sweetheart deals, and inter-agency breakdowns—by burying the record under procedural excuses. Survivor advocates have echoed those demands, warning that endless delays amount to a second betrayal, one that favors bureaucratic self-preservation over transparency and accountability. With every missed deadline and shifting justification, calls for an independent IG probe grow louder, fueled by the belief that the only way the public will ever learn the truth about Epstein’s protection is if the DOJ is investigated by someone who doesn’t have a vested interest in keeping the lid on.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Delayed release of Epstein files triggers calls for internal watchdog review - CBS NewsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 14min

Epstein Files Unsealed:  An NYPD Detective Gives Testimony To The Maxwell Grand Jury In 2021 (Part 9) (1/9/26)

Epstein Files Unsealed: An NYPD Detective Gives Testimony To The Maxwell Grand Jury In 2021 (Part 9) (1/9/26)

In the lead-up to Ghislaine Maxwell’s indictment and eventual arrest, a wide range of law enforcement agents representing multiple agencies were brought before the grand jury to lay out the evidentiary foundation of the case. Their testimony reflected a coordinated federal effort that had been building quietly for years, drawing on investigative work from different jurisdictions, timelines, and investigative lanes. Agents walked jurors through financial records, travel logs, victim accounts, electronic communications, and corroborating witness statements, showing how Maxwell functioned not as a peripheral figure, but as a central facilitator in Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking operation. The cumulative effect of this testimony was to establish pattern, intent, and continuity—demonstrating that Maxwell’s actions were not isolated or accidental, but deliberate, repeated, and essential to the enterprise prosecutors were preparing to charge.In this episode, we take a close, methodical look at that grand jury testimony and what it reveals about how the case against Maxwell was constructed. By examining how different agencies’ witnesses reinforced one another’s findings, the episode highlights how prosecutors built a layered narrative designed to withstand both legal scrutiny and defense attacks. The testimony shows how long-standing investigative threads were finally pulled together after Epstein’s death, transforming years of fragmented information into a cohesive criminal case. Rather than focusing on speculation or hindsight, this episode zeroes in on the mechanics of the prosecution itself—how law enforcement presented the evidence, why the grand jury ultimately moved forward, and how that testimony paved the way for Maxwell’s arrest and indictment.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:EFTA00008744.pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 16min

Epstein Files Unsealed:  An NYPD Detective Gives Testimony To The Maxwell Grand Jury In 2021 (Part 8) (1/9/26)

Epstein Files Unsealed: An NYPD Detective Gives Testimony To The Maxwell Grand Jury In 2021 (Part 8) (1/9/26)

In the lead-up to Ghislaine Maxwell’s indictment and eventual arrest, a wide range of law enforcement agents representing multiple agencies were brought before the grand jury to lay out the evidentiary foundation of the case. Their testimony reflected a coordinated federal effort that had been building quietly for years, drawing on investigative work from different jurisdictions, timelines, and investigative lanes. Agents walked jurors through financial records, travel logs, victim accounts, electronic communications, and corroborating witness statements, showing how Maxwell functioned not as a peripheral figure, but as a central facilitator in Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking operation. The cumulative effect of this testimony was to establish pattern, intent, and continuity—demonstrating that Maxwell’s actions were not isolated or accidental, but deliberate, repeated, and essential to the enterprise prosecutors were preparing to charge.In this episode, we take a close, methodical look at that grand jury testimony and what it reveals about how the case against Maxwell was constructed. By examining how different agencies’ witnesses reinforced one another’s findings, the episode highlights how prosecutors built a layered narrative designed to withstand both legal scrutiny and defense attacks. The testimony shows how long-standing investigative threads were finally pulled together after Epstein’s death, transforming years of fragmented information into a cohesive criminal case. Rather than focusing on speculation or hindsight, this episode zeroes in on the mechanics of the prosecution itself—how law enforcement presented the evidence, why the grand jury ultimately moved forward, and how that testimony paved the way for Maxwell’s arrest and indictment.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:EFTA00008744.pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 14min

Mega Edition:  Haley Robson And Courtney Wild Call For Accountability In The Financial Sector (1/9/26)

Mega Edition: Haley Robson And Courtney Wild Call For Accountability In The Financial Sector (1/9/26)

In their letter, Haley Robson and Courtney Wild lay out a blunt indictment of the financial institutions that enabled Jeffrey Epstein’s criminal empire to function for decades. They argue that Epstein’s abuse operation was not sustained by secrecy alone, but by banks and financial professionals who ignored glaring red flags, processed suspicious transactions, and continued doing business with him long after his criminal conduct was well known. The letter emphasizes that Epstein’s wealth, mobility, and access to victims were directly tied to the services provided by major financial players who treated him as a valuable client rather than a known sex offender. Robson and Wild make clear that without this financial infrastructure, Epstein’s trafficking network could not have operated at the scale or duration that it did.The letter also rejects the idea that civil settlements or regulatory fines amount to real accountability. Robson and Wild demand consequences that go beyond monetary penalties absorbed as the cost of doing business, calling instead for transparency, individual responsibility, and meaningful reform within the financial sector. They stress that survivors are not seeking symbolic gestures or carefully worded apologies, but an honest reckoning with how institutional greed and willful blindness helped shield Epstein from scrutiny. By framing the issue as systemic rather than incidental, the letter challenges regulators, prosecutors, and the public to confront the uncomfortable reality that Epstein’s crimes were not just enabled by people, but by institutions that still have not fully answered for their role.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 43min

Mega Edition:  Epstein, the Media, And The Betrayal Of Epstein's Survivors (1/9/26)

Mega Edition: Epstein, the Media, And The Betrayal Of Epstein's Survivors (1/9/26)

The mishandling of Jeffrey Epstein’s story by left-leaning media created a chain reaction of distrust that continues to ripple outward. By dismissing survivor accounts and labeling the scandal as a “right-wing conspiracy” for years, they not only silenced victims but also misled their own audiences into complacency. When the truth finally broke open, people who leaned left politically were shocked to discover how horrifying Epstein’s crimes really were and how deeply entrenched the system protecting him had been. That betrayal of trust didn’t just harm survivors—it left the public vulnerable to political manipulation.Into this vacuum stepped Donald Trump and his allies, who now weaponize the media’s past failures by calling the entire Epstein affair a hoax. Because mainstream outlets once minimized or mocked the story, Trump can frame it as just another example of “fake news.” This tactic allows him and his base to dismiss the overwhelming evidence while undermining survivor testimony, further eroding accountability. The end result is a scandal that should have united people in outrage but instead has been twisted into partisan noise, leaving survivors betrayed yet again and the public more divided than ever.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 35min

Mega Edition:  The Absence  Of Alleged Co-Conspirator Testimony During The Maxwell Trial (1/8/26)

Mega Edition: The Absence Of Alleged Co-Conspirator Testimony During The Maxwell Trial (1/8/26)

One of the most glaring omissions in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial was who wasn’t put on the stand. Despite years of public acknowledgment by prosecutors, victims, and even courts that Jeffrey Epstein did not operate alone, none of Epstein’s known or suspected co-conspirators were called to testify. The trial was narrowly structured to focus almost exclusively on Maxwell’s role as a recruiter and facilitator, while the broader criminal enterprise was treated as background noise rather than a living network of accomplices. Names that had appeared repeatedly in civil filings, victim statements, and investigative records were conspicuously absent from the courtroom. This was not because those individuals were irrelevant, but because calling them would have forced the government to confront uncomfortable questions about who was protected, who was never charged, and why the conspiracy itself was effectively carved down to a single defendant.That avoidance is most obvious when it comes to what many observers and survivors refer to as the “core four” figures tied to Epstein’s operations—individuals alleged to have managed money, logistics, legal shielding, and daily access to victims. These figures have lingered in the margins of the official narrative for years, acknowledged obliquely if at all, while the focus remains fixed on Epstein and Maxwell alone. The result is a sanitized version of events that frames the crimes as the actions of two bad actors rather than a coordinated system that relied on enablers, fixers, and silence from powerful quarters. By never calling these people to testify, the Maxwell trial reinforced a pattern that has defined the Epstein case from the start: accountability stops early, names disappear before they reach a jury, and the full scope of the conspiracy is left deliberately unresolved.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

9 Jan 43min

Populært innen Politikk og nyheter

giver-og-gjengen-vg
aftenpodden-usa
forklart
popradet
aftenpodden
stopp-verden
det-store-bildet
fotballpodden-2
bt-dokumentar-2
nokon-ma-ga
rss-gukild-johaug
dine-penger-pengeradet
hanna-de-heldige
aftenbla-bla
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-ness
unitedno
frokostshowet-pa-p5
e24-podden
oppdatert