Mega Edition:  Maritza Vazquez And Her Epstein/Jean  Luc Brunel Deposition (Part 1-2) (12/16/25)

Mega Edition: Maritza Vazquez And Her Epstein/Jean Luc Brunel Deposition (Part 1-2) (12/16/25)

Maritza Vazquez, who worked as a bookkeeper for MC2 Model Management, provided critical testimony placing Jean‑Luc Brunel and Jeffrey Epstein at the center of a carefully managed system of underage recruitment and abuse. In her deposition, she identified Brunel as a regular passenger on Epstein’s private jet and noted that Epstein often traveled with girls recruited through MC2—some as young as 14. Vazquez testified that flight logs deliberately omitted the names of some female passengers, suggesting efforts to conceal underage trafficking. She recounted Brunel’s active role in sourcing vulnerable girls from abroad and introducing them into Epstein’s orbit, effectively operating as a global trafficking coordinator.

Vazquez further corroborated that Epstein frequently displayed controlling behavior: he referred to Brunel’s recruits as inventory rather than people, casually discussing having “slept with over a thousand of Brunel’s girls,” according to court documents. Her detailed bookkeeping records and firsthand accounts of scheduling, money flow, and logistics provided prosecutors with evidence of a pipeline feeding Epstein’s sex ring. The deposition exposed how MC2 transactions and Brunel’s agency served as the administrative and logistical backbone for Epstein’s exploitation operation.


to contact me:

bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



source:

Maritza Vasquez Deposition - Discussing Jeffrey Epstein, Jean-Luc Brunel, Donald Trump | DocumentCloud

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

Avsnitt(1000)

Leon  Black And  The  Deep Chasm Known As His Finances

Leon Black And The Deep Chasm Known As His Finances

Senators, primarily through the U.S. Senate Finance Committee under the leadership of Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), launched a lengthy investigation beginning in 2022 into billionaire financier Leon Black’s financial relationship with Jeffrey Epstein and the unusually large payments Black made to Epstein—totaling at least $158 million, and possibly as much as $170 million—between 2012 and 2017 for purported tax and estate planning advice that many lawmakers find dubious given Epstein’s lack of professional credentials. The committee has pressed Black and financial institutions like Bank of America for details about how these funds were managed and why banks did not flag the massive transfers as suspicious in real time, as required under anti-money-laundering regulations. Investigators also noted that Epstein was paid far more than typical advisors and that some of the money may have been used to support Epstein’s wider operations.Wyden’s investigation has expanded to demand transparency from the Department of Justice, Treasury, and Internal Revenue Service, urging those agencies to release Suspicious Activity Reports (SARs) tied to Epstein’s finances and to audit the tax and estate planning work Epstein performed for Black. The Senate’s efforts come amid concerns that oversight has been inadequate, and include seeking documents that might show whether Black’s payments helped fund Epstein’s alleged criminal network. Black has publicly denied involvement in Epstein’s crimes and maintains the payments were lawful, and an independent review commissioned by Black’s firm found no criminal activity; nevertheless, the Senate’s scrutiny continues as part of broader efforts to understand how Epstein’s financial networks operated and were used, and whether existing tax and financial laws were properly enforced.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

18 Dec 13min

The Performative  Nature Of The Investigation Into Epstein And HIs Alleged  Crimes In The UK

The Performative Nature Of The Investigation Into Epstein And HIs Alleged Crimes In The UK

The investigation into Jeffrey Epstein in the United Kingdom has widely been criticized as superficial, fragmented, and structurally incapable of delivering accountability, giving the appearance of due diligence without the substance. Despite extensive public reporting, survivor testimony, flight records, and Epstein’s documented ties to British elites, UK authorities repeatedly framed their involvement as limited “reviews” rather than full criminal investigations. The Metropolitan Police acknowledged receiving material related to Epstein multiple times over the years, yet consistently concluded there were no viable lines of inquiry—without ever clearly explaining what investigative steps were actually taken, who was interviewed, or why obvious avenues were deemed unworkable. This approach created the impression of a process designed to close doors rather than open them, insulating powerful figures from scrutiny while allowing law enforcement to claim procedural neutrality.Critics argue the UK response fits a familiar Epstein pattern: jurisdictional buck-passing, narrow evidentiary thresholds, and a studied reluctance to confront allegations that intersect with wealth, royalty, and international influence. Survivors and transparency advocates have pointed out that Epstein operated transnationally, recruited victims across borders, and maintained properties and contacts tied to the UK—yet no serious effort was made to map that network or test allegations in a courtroom. Instead, decisions not to pursue cases were quietly announced long after public attention peaked, reinforcing the sense that the outcome was predetermined. In this context, the UK investigation is often described less as a failed probe and more as a managed outcome—one that preserved institutional comfort, avoided diplomatic embarrassment, and left the core questions about Epstein’s British connections unresolved and untouched.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

18 Dec 22min

Jeffrey Epstein And The Global Nature Of His Criminal Enterprise

Jeffrey Epstein And The Global Nature Of His Criminal Enterprise

Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes were global in scope, not confined to Palm Beach, Manhattan, or any single jurisdiction, despite early efforts to frame them as isolated local misconduct. Evidence from survivor testimony, flight records, property logs, and court filings shows a transnational pattern of abuse that spanned the United States, the Caribbean, Europe, and beyond. Epstein maintained residences in Florida, New York, New Mexico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Paris, each functioning as part of a broader infrastructure that enabled the recruitment, transport, and exploitation of underage girls. Victims described being trafficked across state and national lines, sometimes flown on private aircraft to meet Epstein and his associates, a hallmark of organized sex trafficking rather than opportunistic abuse.What makes the global nature of Epstein’s crimes especially damning is how consistently institutions failed—or refused—to respond across borders. Financial systems moved money without meaningful scrutiny, immigration and customs processes posed no obstacle, and law enforcement agencies treated jurisdictional complexity as an excuse for inaction rather than a trigger for coordination. Epstein exploited the seams between countries, legal systems, and regulatory bodies, operating in spaces where accountability dissolved. The result was a decades-long international abuse network that thrived precisely because it was global, allowing Epstein to evade consequences while victims were silenced, displaced, and left without any single authority willing to claim responsibility for stopping him.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

18 Dec 20min

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.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

17 Dec 21min

Brad Edwards And His Affidavit In Support Of Epstein Related Transparency By The DOJ (Part 4) (12/17/25)

Brad Edwards And His Affidavit In Support Of Epstein Related Transparency By The DOJ (Part 4) (12/17/25)

The affidavit submitted by attorney Bradley J. Edwards in the Southern District of Florida lays out a detailed argument for why the U.S. government should be compelled to produce documents related to the federal handling of the Jeffrey Epstein case. Edwards, representing Jane Doe No. 1 and Jane Doe No. 2, explains that the requested records are essential to proving that federal prosecutors violated the Crime Victims’ Rights Act (CVRA) by secretly negotiating and finalizing Epstein’s 2007–2008 non-prosecution agreement without notifying the victims. He asserts that internal DOJ communications, emails, memoranda, and investigative records would show what prosecutors knew, when they knew it, and how deliberate their decision was to exclude victims from the process despite clear statutory obligations.Edwards further argues that the government’s resistance to producing these materials undermines transparency and prevents the court from fully evaluating the extent of the misconduct. He emphasizes that the victims cannot meaningfully litigate their CVRA claims without access to evidence exclusively in the government’s possession, particularly records documenting decision-making within the U.S. Attorney’s Office and DOJ headquarters. The affidavit frames the document production not as a fishing expedition, but as a narrowly tailored request necessary to expose how Epstein was granted extraordinary leniency, how victims were intentionally misled, and how federal officials acted with impunity while shielding both Epstein and themselves from accountability.to contact me:bobbycacpucci@protonmail.comsource:gov.uscourts.flsd.317867.265.1_1.pdfBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

17 Dec 12min

Epstein’s Crimes Reached Central and South America But Media Coverage Rarely Followed  (12/17/25)

Epstein’s Crimes Reached Central and South America But Media Coverage Rarely Followed (12/17/25)

Jeffrey Epstein’s activities in Central and South America remain one of the least examined yet most revealing aspects of his global predation network. Testimony from Maritza Vázquez, a former employee of Jean-Luc Brunel’s MC2 agency, describes a structured pipeline that funneled dozens of vulnerable young girls from countries like Peru and Brazil into the United States under the guise of modeling opportunities. According to Vázquez, these regions were not only recruitment grounds but also sites of direct abuse, where Epstein and Brunel allegedly exploited extreme poverty, weak oversight, and institutional indifference. The pattern closely mirrors Brunel’s operations in Eastern Europe, suggesting a standardized, repeatable trafficking model rather than isolated misconduct. Taken together, the evidence points to a deliberate strategy of targeting populations least likely to be protected or believed.What emerges from this broader view is the staggering scale and complexity of Epstein’s operation, which depended on far more than one man’s criminality. His ability to operate for decades across continents required cooperation or negligence from multiple institutions, including modeling agencies, immigration systems, financial intermediaries, and legal professionals. The limited number of publicly identified victims likely represents only a fraction of those harmed, with the true figure plausibly reaching into the thousands. Central and South America functioned as deeper blind spots, where victims were more easily silenced and abuses less likely to attract international scrutiny. The lack of comprehensive global investigations into these regions has left major gaps in accountability, reinforcing the conclusion that Epstein’s crimes were not only vast, but systematically enabled by inequality, corruption, and selective attention.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

17 Dec 13min

Wall Street Opened the World to Epstein—Someone Else Kept Him Safe  (12/17/25)

Wall Street Opened the World to Epstein—Someone Else Kept Him Safe (12/17/25)

The public reawakening to the Jeffrey Epstein story has exposed not just the scale of his crimes, but how profoundly they were misunderstood and minimized for years. Many who once dismissed deeper reporting on Epstein are now fully engaged as legacy outlets publish long retrospectives on his wealth, social connections, and early career, particularly his time at Bear Stearns. While this shift in coverage may appear overdue, it raises an uncomfortable question: why these stories are being told now, long after Epstein abused victims openly in New York and elsewhere with little sustained scrutiny. For years, major media organizations treated the more troubling implications of Epstein’s power as speculative, focusing on isolated scandals rather than the structural forces that allowed him to operate with impunity. The current reporting, much of it recycling information known for half a decade or more, still largely avoids confronting how Epstein repeatedly survived scandals that should have ended his freedom.The missing piece, critics argue, is the role of institutional protection—specifically the possibility that Epstein functioned as a confidential informant for the FBI, explaining his extraordinary immunity from consequences. This framework helps account for the consistent pattern of stalled investigations, lenient treatment, and prosecutorial deference that followed Epstein for decades, culminating in the unprecedented 2008 non-prosecution agreement that shielded both Epstein and unnamed co-conspirators. Rather than interrogating how Epstein escaped accountability at every turn, mainstream coverage has remained fixated on how he made his money, a safer line of inquiry that avoids scrutiny of law enforcement itself. Until journalists squarely address why Epstein was protected—not merely how he accumulated wealth—the story remains fundamentally incomplete, leaving the most consequential questions about power, complicity, and systemic failure unanswered.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

17 Dec 13min

Bear Stearns and the Birth of Epstein’s Financial Myth  (12/17/25)

Bear Stearns and the Birth of Epstein’s Financial Myth (12/17/25)

Jeffrey Epstein’s entry into Bear Stearns in the mid-1970s was unusual from the start, as he was hired despite lacking a college degree and having misrepresented his academic background. He began in a junior role but quickly moved into advising wealthy clients and was eventually made a limited partner, a rise aided more by internal relationships than traditional qualifications. Concerns about his behavior and credibility circulated within the firm, and his tenure ended after roughly five years amid regulatory scrutiny. The firm never publicly explained the precise circumstances of his departure, leaving lingering questions about how and why he was allowed to advance as far as he did.After leaving Bear Stearns, Epstein repeatedly leveraged his association with the firm as a badge of legitimacy, using it to portray himself as a seasoned Wall Street insider. Contacts from that period helped him attract ultra-wealthy clients and establish himself as a private money manager operating largely outside public view. The Bear Stearns connection became central to the financial identity he cultivated, providing credibility and access that far exceeded the scope and substance of his actual work there. That early Wall Street pedigree helped open doors that would later prove critical to the scale of his wealth, influence, and reach.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.

17 Dec 14min

Populärt inom Politik & nyheter

svenska-fall
aftonbladet-krim
motiv
p3-krim
fordomspodden
flashback-forever
rss-viva-fotboll
rss-krimstad
aftonbladet-daily
rss-sanning-konsekvens
spar
blenda-2
rss-krimreportrarna
rss-frandfors-horna
rss-vad-fan-hande
dagens-eko
olyckan-inifran
krimmagasinet
rss-flodet
spotlight