Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Initial Roster Of Witnesses During Her Trial

Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Initial Roster Of Witnesses During Her Trial

When Judge Alison Nathan ordered the defense to submit its potential witness roster before trial, Maxwell’s lawyers presented a sprawling list of over 30 witnesses, some of them overseas, including former assistants, social friends, employees, and at least one member of Epstein’s inner circle like Eva Andersson-Dubin (the former Miss Sweden and wife of billionaire Glenn Dubin). The list even included several individuals who had been named in press reports or depositions as having seen Epstein’s conduct firsthand. The defense also proposed “character witnesses” meant to paint Maxwell as a victim of selective prosecution and an unfair press, and they floated calling experts in psychology, law enforcement procedure, and even media ethics. But when the trial began, almost the entire roster evaporated. Out of more than 30 potential names, only nine actually took the stand, and many of those offered procedural or character evidence rather than firsthand accounts.


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bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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Mega Edition:  The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial, Juan Alessi And The Photo Albums (10/21/25)

Mega Edition: The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial, Juan Alessi And The Photo Albums (10/21/25)

During Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial, Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime Palm Beach house manager Juan Alessi testified that Maxwell kept multiple photo albums containing pictures of young girls — some topless — who frequented Epstein’s estate. He said Maxwell often used a high-end camera and was “constantly taking photographs,” many of which featured these girls by the pool or sunbathing without tops. Alessi told jurors that he came across these albums while cleaning the house and described them as being filled with “very young-looking girls.” He recalled that Maxwell appeared to enjoy showing the albums to guests, suggesting she took pride in her role managing Epstein’s social and private life.Alessi’s testimony painted Maxwell as an active participant in Epstein’s day-to-day operations, not merely an assistant. He said she controlled the staff with a 58-page household manual that dictated everything from staff behavior to how Epstein’s phone calls were to be handled. Prosecutors used his account of the photo albums to underscore the pervasive sexualization of minors within Epstein’s homes and to establish that Maxwell was not only aware of but contributed to creating an environment that enabled abuse. His statements about the albums became one of the most visually disturbing depictions of how normalized exploitation had become inside the Epstein household.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

21 Okt 30min

Mega Edition:   Jeffrey Epstein, Nicholas Tartaglione And The Narrative MCC Tried To Sell Us (10/20/25)

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein, Nicholas Tartaglione And The Narrative MCC Tried To Sell Us (10/20/25)

When Jeffrey Epstein was first found semi-conscious in his Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) cell in July 2019, the Bureau of Prisons claimed it was a suicide attempt — but Epstein told his lawyers he’d been attacked by his cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, a former cop awaiting trial for four murders. That decision alone — to house Epstein, arguably the most high-profile inmate in the country, with a man accused of killing four people — defied logic and protocol. Tartaglione was a massive, physically imposing inmate with a violent reputation, yet the MCC placed him in the same small cell as a known sex offender and public target. When Epstein was discovered with bruising around his neck, Tartaglione told officials he’d “helped” Epstein and had nothing to do with the incident. Within days, the MCC cleared Tartaglione, declared there was “no foul play,” and went right back to business — an astonishingly fast turnaround for what should have been a high-level criminal investigation inside a federal lockup.Critics have since pointed out how convenient that outcome was for everyone involved: Epstein’s claims were buried, Tartaglione was quietly removed from the narrative, and no meaningful inquiry into the alleged attack was ever made public. The Department of Justice later admitted the MCC had malfunctioning cameras during both incidents involving Epstein — the first with Tartaglione, and the second when Epstein was found dead. Given Epstein’s later “suicide” just weeks after being left alone in his cell, the speed and silence surrounding Tartaglione’s clearance look less like routine procedure and more like deliberate damage control. The question remains why a quadruple-murder defendant was ever in the same cell as the most notorious inmate in federal custody — and why every step of the investigation that followed seemed designed to erase accountability rather than uncover the truth.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

21 Okt 30min

Jeffrey Epstein And The Cash Grab Against His Estate

Jeffrey Epstein And The Cash Grab Against His Estate

Since Jeffrey Epstein’s death in 2019, his estate has faced a flood of lawsuits from victims, governments, and financial institutions seeking accountability for the massive sex-trafficking operation he built. Multiple women filed civil suits within weeks of his death, alleging they were sexually abused as minors and lured into Epstein’s network under false pretenses. The U.S. Virgin Islands’ Attorney General also sued the estate in 2020, accusing it of operating a “criminal enterprise” from Epstein’s private islands. That case ended in 2022 with a $105 million settlement — one of several massive payouts that drained what was once a $650 million estate. Victims’ lawyers accused the estate’s executors of slow-walking claims and hiding documents to limit exposure, while federal lawmakers demanded access to Epstein’s records, ledgers, and calendars to uncover who else was involved.As the civil claims mounted, two of Epstein’s closest advisers — lawyer Darren Indyke and accountant Richard Kahn — were sued for allegedly aiding and abetting the trafficking operation, marking a rare step in holding the inner circle accountable. The estate also became entangled in lawsuits with banks like Bank of America and Bank of New York Mellon over their financial ties to Epstein’s accounts, deepening the controversy around how his operation was sustained for so long. By 2024, the executors admitted that the estate was running low on funds after paying settlements and legal costs, only to later receive a massive tax refund that swelled its assets again — sparking outrage that Epstein’s associates could still profit. Years later, the estate remains a legal battleground symbolizing how deep, durable, and well-protected Epstein’s empire truly was.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

21 Okt 14min

Sam Bankman Fried, Ghislaine Maxwell And The Lawyer Who Represented Them Both (10/20/25)

Sam Bankman Fried, Ghislaine Maxwell And The Lawyer Who Represented Them Both (10/20/25)

Sam Bankman-Fried raised eyebrows when he hired Mark Cohen, the same attorney who represented Ghislaine Maxwell during her high-profile sex-trafficking trial. Cohen, a former federal prosecutor and co-founder of the law firm Cohen & Gresser, was part of Maxwell’s defense team that argued she was being scapegoated for Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes. Bankman-Fried brought Cohen on to lead his defense following his arrest in late 2022, a move that immediately sparked comparisons between the two notorious cases — both involving allegations of manipulation, power, and privilege shielding elites from accountability.The decision was strategic, not coincidental. Cohen’s expertise lies in navigating complex federal prosecutions involving massive evidence and global attention — precisely what Bankman-Fried faced in his FTX fraud case. His partner, Christian Everdell, another veteran of the Maxwell defense, also joined the SBF legal team. The pairing signaled that Bankman-Fried’s defense would mirror Maxwell’s in tone and sophistication, emphasizing procedural scrutiny and reasonable-doubt tactics over moral argument — a calculated legal strategy to counter the government’s sweeping narrative.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

20 Okt 12min

Jeffrey Epstein And The Vanishing Video

Jeffrey Epstein And The Vanishing Video

During late July 2019, Epstein was found semi-conscious in his cell with marks on his neck in what authorities called his first suicide attempt. Surveillance footage from outside his cell, recorded on July 22–23 of that year, was said to capture the event or circumstances around it. However, prosecutors later disclosed that the footage “no longer exists” — it was lost or deleted, purportedly due to a technical or clerical error involving preservation of video from the wrong tier.The disappearance of that video has been heavily criticized by legal observers, investigators, and conspiracy theorists alike. The fact that evidence from a highly significant incident—one that could bear on the conditions of Epstein’s incarceration and safety protocols—cannot be accounted for raises serious questions about record-keeping, digital evidence chain of custody, and the transparency of prison surveillance systems.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

20 Okt 16min

The Man in Epstein's Cockpit: Larry Visoski’s 2009 Deposition (Part 15) (10/20/25)

The Man in Epstein's Cockpit: Larry Visoski’s 2009 Deposition (Part 15) (10/20/25)

In his October 2009 deposition, taken during the Jeffrey Epstein v. Bradley Edwards defamation lawsuit, longtime Epstein pilot Larry Visoski described his decades of employment under Epstein and the routine nature of his work. Questioned by victims’ attorney Bradley Edwards, Visoski confirmed that he had flown Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and numerous guests—some of them prominent figures—across Epstein’s properties in New York, Florida, New Mexico, and the Virgin Islands. Represented by Critton & Reinhardt, Visoski repeatedly emphasized that his duties were strictly professional: piloting aircraft, maintaining schedules, and ensuring safe transport. When pressed about the ages of female passengers, he claimed he never knowingly flew minors and denied witnessing any sexual activity or misconduct aboard Epstein’s planes.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

20 Okt 16min

From Courtroom to Chalet: The Secret Bond Between Epstein and His Prosecutor Matt Menchel (10/20/25)

From Courtroom to Chalet: The Secret Bond Between Epstein and His Prosecutor Matt Menchel (10/20/25)

Matthew I. Menchel, once the Chief of the Criminal Division at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida, played a pivotal role in shaping the 2007–2008 non-prosecution agreement that spared Jeffrey Epstein from serious federal charges. As the FBI gathered overwhelming evidence against Epstein for trafficking and abusing underage girls, Menchel’s office instead negotiated a secret plea deal that granted Epstein and his co-conspirators broad immunity. Reports later revealed that Menchel had blocked early efforts to arrest Epstein and failed to disclose a prior romantic relationship with one of Epstein’s defense attorneys, Lilly Ann Sanchez—a glaring ethical lapse identified by the Department of Justice’s internal review. His influence within the Miami office made him a key architect of what became one of the most infamous legal failures in modern U.S. history, a betrayal of both the victims and the principles of equal justice.Now, newly surfaced documents have reignited outrage by revealing that Menchel’s connection to Epstein may have gone far beyond the courtroom. Evidence of ski trips, dinners, and personal contact between the two men paints a damning picture of proximity and favoritism that directly undermines any claim of impartiality. If true, these revelations transform an already scandalous case into a full-blown indictment of prosecutorial integrity, suggesting the man charged with holding Epstein accountable was instead socializing with him. For the victims, and for a public already disillusioned by power’s protection of predators, these details are not just shocking—they confirm what many suspected all along: justice in Epstein’s case wasn’t blind. It was bought, brokered, and betrayed from within.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Epstein had dinners with a top Florida prosecutor on his case, docs showBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

20 Okt 27min

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