Mega Edition:    Jes Staley And The Amended Motion To Dismiss The Epstein Survivor Suit (Part 1-2) (12/6/25)

Mega Edition: Jes Staley And The Amended Motion To Dismiss The Epstein Survivor Suit (Part 1-2) (12/6/25)

Jes Staley, the former JPMorgan executive, filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit brought against him by survivors of Jeffrey Epstein's abuse. However, U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff denied this motion, allowing the case to proceed to pre-trial evidence gathering..


Staley is accused of protecting Epstein during his tenure at JPMorgan, where he worked from 1979 to 2013. The bank claims that Staley was instrumental in maintaining Epstein's business relationship with JPMorgan despite Epstein's criminal activities. JPMorgan seeks to make Staley financially responsible for any damages the bank might incur from other related lawsuits and to recover compensation paid to him from 2006 to 2013. Staley has denied these allegations, stating that JPMorgan is using him as a scapegoat for its own supervisory failures and claims he was unaware of Epstein’s criminal behavior​.

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to contact me:

bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


source:

Microsoft Word - MTD Mem. of Law - (11148357.16).docx (courtlistener.com)

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Jeffrey Epstein Lobby's Bill Clinton  On Behalf Of Les Wexner

Jeffrey Epstein Lobby's Bill Clinton On Behalf Of Les Wexner

Jeffrey Epstein repeatedly leveraged his access to Bill Clinton during the late 1990s to act as an unofficial, shadow lobbyist for Les Wexner, pressing for changes to U.S. trade policy that would directly benefit Wexner’s retail empire. Epstein used his proximity to Clinton—cultivated through donor circles, private meetings, and international trips—to raise concerns about tariffs, import restrictions, and manufacturing rules affecting apparel companies reliant on overseas production. According to reporting and later disclosures, Epstein framed these efforts as economic modernization and competitiveness, but in practice they aligned neatly with Wexner’s business interests, particularly his dependence on low-cost foreign manufacturing and favorable customs treatment. Epstein had no formal government role, no lobbying registration, and no legitimate policy portfolio—yet he inserted himself into trade discussions by exploiting access most people never had.What makes this episode especially damning is how nakedly it illustrates Epstein’s real utility to powerful people: he was a fixer who trafficked access, not ideas. Epstein wasn’t lobbying out of ideological conviction; he was repaying Wexner, the man who financed his rise, by quietly pushing the levers of power on his behalf. Clinton did not publicly acknowledge Epstein as a lobbyist, and Epstein’s role was never disclosed in the way legitimate influence efforts are supposed to be, allowing the entire maneuver to happen in the shadows. This wasn’t Epstein freelancing—it was influence laundering, where wealth bought proximity, proximity bought access, and access was used to advance private corporate interests without accountability. Long before Epstein became a household name for his crimes, he was already operating in the murkiest overlap between money, politics, and untraceable influence.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

25 Jan 12min

Jean Luc  Brunel And The Lawsuit He Filed  Against Jeffrey  Epstein

Jean Luc Brunel And The Lawsuit He Filed Against Jeffrey Epstein

Jean-Luc Brunel filed a civil lawsuit against Jeffrey Epstein in 2015, presenting himself not as a co-conspirator but as a victim of Epstein’s alleged manipulation and betrayal. Brunel claimed that Epstein deliberately destroyed his modeling business and personal reputation by steering law enforcement scrutiny, civil accusations, and public suspicion in his direction in order to shield himself. The suit argued that Epstein used Brunel as a convenient fall guy once his own criminal exposure became unavoidable, allowing Epstein to quietly sacrifice a longtime associate to preserve his own freedom and elite connections. Brunel alleged that Epstein had exercised financial leverage, control over introductions, and influence within the modeling world, and that once Brunel was no longer useful—or became a liability—Epstein allowed or encouraged allegations to stick to him while insulating himself.The lawsuit was notable not because it cleared Brunel, but because it exposed how Epstein’s inner circle functioned: relationships were transactional, disposable, and ruthlessly hierarchical. Brunel did not deny knowing Epstein or working with him; instead, he argued that Epstein weaponized proximity, leaving associates exposed while he remained protected by wealth, lawyers, and political insulation. Epstein responded aggressively, moving to dismiss the case and countering with his own claims, turning the litigation into a preview of how he handled all legal threats—delay, overwhelm, and procedural warfare. The case ultimately went nowhere in practical terms, bogged down in motions and later overtaken by Epstein’s 2019 arrest and death, but it remains a key document showing how those closest to Epstein understood the system: Epstein survived by letting others burn first.to contact  me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

24 Jan 44min

Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey  Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 7) (1/24/26)

Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 7) (1/24/26)

In the 2017 video deposition of Courtney E. Wild, taken as part of the civil case Epstein v. Rothstein in the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit Court of Florida, Wild testified under oath about her personal background, criminal history, and relevant circumstances before the court began substantive questions. The early portion of the deposition focuses on Wild’s identity and personal history, including her marriage, family situation, and her own past convictions, including a drug trafficking conviction for which she was serving a sentence at the Gadsden Correctional Facility in Florida at the time of the deposition. Wild was sworn in and answered basic biographical questions about her life prior to moving into the heart of the civil litigation against Epstein’s representatives and others, establishing her presence and credibility as a witness in the case’s factual recordto contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:1027.pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

24 Jan 13min

Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey  Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 6) (1/24/26)

Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 6) (1/24/26)

In the 2017 video deposition of Courtney E. Wild, taken as part of the civil case Epstein v. Rothstein in the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit Court of Florida, Wild testified under oath about her personal background, criminal history, and relevant circumstances before the court began substantive questions. The early portion of the deposition focuses on Wild’s identity and personal history, including her marriage, family situation, and her own past convictions, including a drug trafficking conviction for which she was serving a sentence at the Gadsden Correctional Facility in Florida at the time of the deposition. Wild was sworn in and answered basic biographical questions about her life prior to moving into the heart of the civil litigation against Epstein’s representatives and others, establishing her presence and credibility as a witness in the case’s factual recordto contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:1027.pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

24 Jan 12min

Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey  Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 5) (1/24/26)

Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 5) (1/24/26)

In the 2017 video deposition of Courtney E. Wild, taken as part of the civil case Epstein v. Rothstein in the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit Court of Florida, Wild testified under oath about her personal background, criminal history, and relevant circumstances before the court began substantive questions. The early portion of the deposition focuses on Wild’s identity and personal history, including her marriage, family situation, and her own past convictions, including a drug trafficking conviction for which she was serving a sentence at the Gadsden Correctional Facility in Florida at the time of the deposition. Wild was sworn in and answered basic biographical questions about her life prior to moving into the heart of the civil litigation against Epstein’s representatives and others, establishing her presence and credibility as a witness in the case’s factual recordto contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:1027.pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

24 Jan 12min

Mega Edition:  The Prince Andrew  Movie "Scoop"  And The Palace's Reaction To It (1/24/26)

Mega Edition: The Prince Andrew Movie "Scoop" And The Palace's Reaction To It (1/24/26)

Netflix’s Scoop, a high-profile dramatic film about Prince Andrew’s disastrous BBC Newsnight interview — the 2019 broadcast in which he attempted to explain his ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein — was announced and released to significant attention as it revisits a moment that helped derail his public life. The film, based on Sam McAlister’s memoir Scoops and starring roles by Gillian Anderson, Billie Piper, and Rufus Sewell, retells how BBC producers secured the interview and how that event unfolded on camera, showing the palace negotiations and Andrew’s statements that were widely panned and mocked. Scoop dropped on Netflix on April 5, 2024 and has since generated discussion not just as entertainment but as a cultural recounting of one of the most consequential media moments involving the British royal family in recent memory.While this film drew interest from audiences and critics intrigued by the behind-the-scenes story of a globally infamous interview, Buckingham Palace did not publicly endorse or celebrate the movie — and its official reactions have been minimal to non-committal. When asked if the palace had reached out to producers or commented on the dramatization, Sam McAlister jokingly noted she hadn’t heard from the institution, implying there was no formal engagement from royal spokespeople about the project. The lack of an official positive palace response — combined with the enduring sensitivity around Andrew’s role in the Epstein scandal — suggests the establishment prefers to distance itself from dramatizations that revisit and potentially amplify a deeply embarrassing episode for the monarchy.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

24 Jan 32min

Mega Edition:  Jeffrey Epstein, Leon Black, Larry Summers And The IPI (1/24/26)

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein, Leon Black, Larry Summers And The IPI (1/24/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s entanglement with Leon Black and Larry Summers runs through the Jeffrey Epstein VI Foundation and its flagship project, the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET), born out of the wreckage of the 2008 financial crisis. Black, the billionaire Apollo founder, bankrolled INET with roughly $25 million and installed himself as its chief patron, while Summers — fresh off his controversial presidency at Harvard and a career bouncing between Wall Street and Washington — became one of its intellectual faces. Epstein, already a convicted sex offender by 2008, quietly emerged as a financial conduit and behind-the-scenes broker for INET and its affiliates, using donor networks, shell foundations, and elite access to move money and cultivate influence. Through Epstein’s foundation, funds were routed into academic projects, conferences, and research hubs that placed him back inside elite academic circles that had supposedly shut him out, laundering his reputation through economics, philanthropy, and intellectual respectability.What makes the IPI/INET web so corrosive is how thoroughly it fused money, power, and reputational cover. Black would later admit paying Epstein $158 million for “tax advice,” an explanation so implausible it collapsed under its own weight, while Summers maintained institutional ties to projects and donors connected to Epstein long after his 2008 conviction was public record. Epstein was not a peripheral donor — he was a facilitator, recruiter, and fixer who connected hedge-fund money, Ivy League legitimacy, and political access in a closed loop that insulated all participants from scrutiny. The IPI ecosystem gave Epstein exactly what he needed after Florida: proximity to young academics, international travel, visa sponsorships, and an elite shield that made him look like a disgraced financier turned reformed intellectual benefactor. It wasn’t an accident, and it wasn’t ignorance — it was a deliberate system where billionaires, former Treasury secretaries, and a convicted predator all found mutual benefit inside the same polished academic machine.to contact  me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

24 Jan 38min

Mega Edition:  Judge Rakoff Makes A Ruling In The Survivors Suit Against USVI  (Part 5-7) (1/24/26)

Mega Edition: Judge Rakoff Makes A Ruling In The Survivors Suit Against USVI (Part 5-7) (1/24/26)

Judge Jed Rakoff approved a $290 million settlement between JPMorgan Chase and Jeffrey Epstein's victims, emphasizing that the case sent a strong message to the financial industry about the responsibilities of banking institutions. The settlement, which did not require JPMorgan to admit liability, resolved claims that the bank ignored red flags to maintain Epstein as a client, benefiting from his illegal activities from 1998 to 2013.The approval came after a last-minute challenge from 16 state attorneys general who objected to a clause in the settlement that prevented future claims by any "sovereign or government" on behalf of the victims. They argued that this could hinder future cases against sex trafficking perpetrators. However, Rakoff found the settlement terms clear and justified, dismissing the objections.The settlement also included a provision for the lawyers to receive 30% of the settlement amount in fees, which the judge deemed fair given the significant recovery for the plaintiffs. This settlement follows a similar case where Deutsche Bank agreed to pay $75 million to settle claims related to Epstein without admitting wrongdoing.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:gov.uscourts.nysd.591653.130.0_1.pdf (courtlistener.com)Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

24 Jan 32min

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