Mega Edition:  Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Failed Bail Campaign (11/16/25)

Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Failed Bail Campaign (11/16/25)

From the moment Ghislaine Maxwell was arrested in July 2020, she launched an aggressive series of bail attempts, all of which were rejected by federal judges who consistently found her to be an extreme flight risk. In her first effort, she requested release to home confinement with electronic monitoring, but prosecutors and the court highlighted her dual citizenships, extensive international ties, history of global travel, and large undisclosed financial resources. The court determined that no conditions—no matter how strict—could reasonably ensure that she would appear for trial. In December 2020, Maxwell’s legal team escalated their offer with a proposed $28.5 million bail package, secured by properties and supported by family members willing to act as guarantors. She also offered to waive her citizenships and abide by 24-hour armed guard monitoring, but the judge again ruled that her financial reach and international network made her uniquely capable of disappearing if released.


Following that failure, Maxwell submitted multiple additional bail requests in early 2021, each one attempting to address prior objections and each one rejected. The court pointed to documented efforts she had made to evade law enforcement, including hiding on a secluded New Hampshire estate and transferring assets through shell accounts, as evidence that she could not be trusted to remain under supervision. Prosecutors emphasized that her wealth was deliberately obscured, her ties to countries that do not extradite were significant, and the allegations against her were extraordinarily serious. Even her appeals to the Second Circuit were denied, affirming the lower court’s conclusion that she posed a flight risk that no bail package could mitigate. Ultimately, her detention remained in place until trial and conviction.


to contact me:

bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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

Episoder(1000)

Epstein Files Unsealed:  Juan Alessi And The Deposition Given To Detective Recarey (Part 1) (1/2/26)

Epstein Files Unsealed: Juan Alessi And The Deposition Given To Detective Recarey (Part 1) (1/2/26)

a sworn statement given by Juan Alessi to Palm Beach law enforcement during the early phase of the Epstein investigation. In that statement, Alessi describes his role as the house manager at Epstein’s Palm Beach residence and recounts that young girls regularly came to the home to provide “massages.” He stated that these visits were frequent and routine, and that over time he noticed the girls appeared to be getting younger. Alessi specifically recalled questioning whether some of the girls were as young as 16 or 17, signaling that concerns about age were present well before the case became public.Alessi’s statement is significant because it documents staff-level awareness of troubling conduct inside Epstein’s home at an early stage of the investigation. While the document does not take the form of a later civil-style deposition transcript, it is a formal sworn account given directly to investigators involved in the case, including those working under Joe Recarey. The statement reinforces that Epstein’s operation was not hidden from household staff and that warning signs were visible to law enforcement as early as 2005. It stands as contemporaneous evidence that allegations involving underage girls were known, documented, and taken seriously enough to be memorialized in sworn law enforcement records—long before the controversial prosecutorial decisions that followed.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Epstein Part 16 (Redacted).pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 12min

If The Epstein  Story  Is A Hoax, Why Was  Suzie Wiles Digging Into The Files?  (1/3/26)

If The Epstein Story Is A Hoax, Why Was Suzie Wiles Digging Into The Files? (1/3/26)

The Vanity Fair remarks attributed to Suzie Wiles detonated because they exposed a contradiction the administration has never resolved: public dismissal paired with private concern. Wiles spoke as someone familiar with the contents of the Epstein files, despite the Department of Justice itself maintaining that the archive is sprawling, incomplete, and still under review. That disparity raises unavoidable questions about access, authority, and motive. A White House Chief of Staff has no routine role in reviewing criminal case materials unless there is perceived political or institutional exposure. Her involvement suggests the files are being treated not as historical records, but as live risk assessments. That reality collapses the claim that Epstein is irrelevant or a “hoax.” You don’t allocate senior attention to things you believe are meaningless.What makes this especially corrosive is the administration’s refusal to explain how or why this access occurred. Silence has replaced transparency, reinforcing the impression that there is one narrative for the public and another for those in power. The Epstein case has always been less dangerous for what it reveals about one man than for what it exposes about institutional self-protection. By quietly engaging with the files while publicly minimizing them, the administration confirms that Jeffrey Epstein remains an unresolved liability. That contradiction is now on the record. And once power signals fear of what the files contain, the question is no longer whether they matter—but who they threaten, and why the public is being kept at arm’s length from the truth.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 16min

Mega Edition:   Jeffrey Epstein's Pilots And  Their Testimony During The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (1/3/26)

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein's Pilots And Their Testimony During The Ghislaine Maxwell Trial (1/3/26)

During the Ghislaine Maxwell trial, testimony from Larry Visoski, Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime pilot, provided jurors with a detailed look at Epstein’s extensive travel patterns and the people who routinely accompanied him. Visoski described flying Epstein on numerous domestic and international trips over many years, including to the U.S. Virgin Islands, New Mexico, and overseas destinations. He testified that young women and girls were frequently passengers on these flights, sometimes traveling without parents or clear explanations for their presence. Visoski’s testimony helped establish the scale and regularity of Epstein’s operations, showing that the movement of underage girls was not incidental but a repeated and normalized part of Epstein’s private air travel.David Rodgers, Epstein’s former property manager in the U.S. Virgin Islands, complemented Visoski’s testimony by explaining how Epstein’s residences functioned on the ground, particularly on Little Saint James. Rodgers described seeing young girls at the island, observing their interactions with Epstein, and understanding that their presence was sexual in nature. He testified that the girls were often brought to Epstein as part of an expected routine and that staff understood not to interfere. Together, Visoski and Rodgers provided corroborating insider accounts—one from the air and one from the ground—that reinforced the prosecution’s argument that Ghislaine Maxwell was part of a broader, sustained system that enabled Epstein’s abuse rather than a peripheral figure disconnected from it.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 1h 5min

Mega Edition:  Jeffrey Epstein's Former Butler Juan Alessi And His Testimony At Maxwell's Trial (1/2/26)

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein's Former Butler Juan Alessi And His Testimony At Maxwell's Trial (1/2/26)

During the Ghislaine Maxwell trial, Juan Alessi—Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime estate manager—testified as a key insider who provided jurors with a ground-level view of how Epstein’s properties operated on a daily basis. Alessi described his responsibilities managing Epstein’s homes, particularly in Palm Beach, and explained how young girls were regularly brought to the residence for what were described as “massages.” He testified that this was not an occasional or hidden occurrence but a routine part of life at the house, with frequent visits by underage girls and systems in place to manage their arrivals and departures. Alessi also confirmed that payments were made to the girls, reinforcing the prosecution’s argument that the abuse was organized and transactional rather than spontaneous or misunderstood.Alessi’s testimony was especially damaging because it placed Ghislaine Maxwell directly inside the operational structure of Epstein’s abuse. He told the jury that Maxwell was regularly present at the Palm Beach home, was aware of the girls coming and going, and at times interacted with them herself. His account undermined the defense’s attempt to portray Maxwell as detached from Epstein’s criminal conduct, instead depicting her as someone who knew exactly what was happening inside the house. By confirming the routine nature of the visits and Maxwell’s proximity to them, Alessi’s testimony helped establish knowledge, continuity, and intent—critical elements for the prosecution’s case.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 1h 15min

Mega Edition:  Les Wexner And The Jeffrey Epstein White Wash (1/2/26)

Mega Edition: Les Wexner And The Jeffrey Epstein White Wash (1/2/26)

Les Wexner’s central role in Jeffrey Epstein’s rise—from obscure money manager to untouchable power broker—has been persistently minimized, softened, or outright ignored in much of the public narrative. Epstein did not ascend in a vacuum. His access, wealth, legitimacy, and institutional protection were built first and foremost through Les Wexner, who handed Epstein unprecedented financial authority, legal insulation, and proximity to elite political and social networks. That relationship was not incidental or brief; it was foundational. Yet over time, Wexner has been recast as a naive victim of betrayal rather than the primary enabler who created the conditions that allowed Epstein to operate with power, money, and perceived credibility for decades.This whitewashing persists despite overwhelming evidence that Epstein’s reign of terror depended on the empire Wexner placed in his hands—control over vast assets, private aircraft, multiple properties, and the veneer of respectability that comes from being tied to one of the most powerful businessmen in America. While Jeffrey Epstein is rightly condemned as the predator at the center, the systems and patrons that empowered him are routinely excused, compartmentalized, or quietly absolved. Wexner’s narrative has been carefully laundered through selective reporting and legal distance, but the reality remains unavoidable: without Wexner’s patronage, Epstein never becomes Epstein, and the continued reluctance to confront that truth represents one of the most enduring failures of accountability in the entire scandal.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 43min

Mega Edition:  Jes Staley Complains About Being Railroaded By The Epstein Allegations (1/3/25)

Mega Edition: Jes Staley Complains About Being Railroaded By The Epstein Allegations (1/3/25)

Jes Staley has repeatedly argued that he was unfairly railroaded by his association with Jeffrey Epstein, portraying himself as collateral damage in a scandal he claims was exaggerated and mischaracterized. In public statements and court filings, Jes Staley has insisted that his relationship with Epstein was overstated, that he had no knowledge of Epstein’s criminal conduct, and that the fallout cost him his career and reputation unjustly. Staley has framed the allegations as a narrative pile-on—suggesting that regulators, banks, and the media needed a single, convenient figure to absorb blame once Epstein’s crimes became impossible to ignore.Those denials, however, collapse under the weight of the documented facts. Emails, travel records, and testimony show that Staley maintained a far closer and longer relationship with Jeffrey Epstein than he publicly acknowledged, including repeated personal contact well after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Evidence revealed during regulatory investigations and litigation contradicts Staley’s claims of distance and ignorance, exposing a pattern of sustained engagement that undercuts his credibility. When set against the paper trail, Staley’s insistence that he was merely an unlucky bystander rings hollow—less a case of being railroaded, and more an example of how implausible denials unravel once they’re tested against emails, calendars, and sworn findings.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 50min

Mega Edition:  Alan Dershowitz Capitulates To Netflix And Talks Epstein And Intelligence (1/2/26)

Mega Edition: Alan Dershowitz Capitulates To Netflix And Talks Epstein And Intelligence (1/2/26)

Alan Dershowitz quietly dropped his defamation lawsuit against Netflix, ending a legal fight he launched over his portrayal in the Epstein-related documentary series. Dershowitz had claimed the program falsely implicated him in Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes and damaged his reputation, but the decision to abandon the case brought the dispute to an abrupt close without a courtroom reckoning over the underlying allegations. The withdrawal spared Netflix from discovery and testimony that could have further widened the Epstein record, while also leaving many of the factual disputes unresolved in the public eye.At the same time, Alan Dershowitz reignited controversy by repeating and expanding on his claim that Jeffrey Epstein functioned as a kind of intelligence asset or “spy,” a characterization he has floated in multiple interviews over the years. Dershowitz has suggested Epstein’s connections to powerful figures and governments explain both his unusual access and the extraordinary leniency he received for so long. Critics argue that framing Epstein as a spy risks deflecting attention from the concrete evidence of abuse and the institutional failures that protected him, turning a documented criminal conspiracy into a murkier story of intrigue that muddies accountability rather than clarifying it.to  contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 39min

All Roads To Full Jeffrey Epstein/Ghislaine Maxwell Transparency Lead Directly To The NPA

All Roads To Full Jeffrey Epstein/Ghislaine Maxwell Transparency Lead Directly To The NPA

In November 2020, lawyers representing a Jeffrey Epstein victim filed a legal motion demanding that the U.S. Department of Justice release previously concealed information related to Epstein’s secret 2007 non-prosecution agreement. The motion centered around a troubling gap in documentation—specifically, missing emails from then-U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta’s office during the period when the controversial plea deal was negotiated. Victims’ attorneys argued that these missing records could reveal undisclosed communications, potential misconduct, or improper coordination between Epstein’s defense team and federal prosecutors.The legal team emphasized that the absence of this material undermined public trust and cast doubt on the government’s narrative surrounding Epstein’s prosecution. “I think it calls into doubt everything that we've been told about the case,” said one of the attorneys, urging the DOJ to come clean about the full extent of its dealings with Epstein. The motion underscored the growing belief among survivors and their advocates that the original agreement—which allowed Epstein to avoid federal charges and protected unnamed co-conspirators—was not just flawed, but potentially the product of behind-the-scenes corruption or manipulation that still has not been fully disclosed.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Lawyers for Epstein victim seek 'previously concealed information' from Justice Department - ABC NewsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-moscow-murders-and-more--5852883/support.

3 Jan 15min

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