
Why Were Items Allowed To be Removed From Epstein's Home One Day After His Death?
One day after Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his cell, Richard Kahn — executor of Epstein’s estate — was reportedly photographed entering Epstein’s Manhattan mansion and walking out with a large bag in hand. At a moment when the residence should have been under strict control as an active crime scene and evidence-preservation site, why was someone connected to Epstein’s inner circle seemingly allowed unrestricted access? And more importantly, what exactly was in that bag?This incident raises a larger and far more troubling question: if items were being removed from Epstein’s properties so quickly after his death, how can anyone trust that the evidence collected — or what remains of it — represents the full truth? If a man responsible for managing Epstein’s estate could walk in and walk out with materials before investigators completed their work, what else might have been removed, swapped, or buried before the public ever had a chance to see it?to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Nov 38min

You Didn't Actually Think Disgraced Prince Andrew Would Speak With Congress Did You? (11/20/25)
Prince Andrew’s continued evasion of accountability has transformed him into a central figure in the fallout surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s criminal empire. Born into one of the most privileged positions on earth, he repeatedly placed himself in Epstein’s inner circle even after Epstein’s conviction, including reportedly staying at his home in New York after the scandal was public. A widely criticized BBC interview intended to clear his name instead became a defining moment of public collapse, in which Andrew offered implausible explanations involving a Pizza Express alibi and a medical claim that he could not sweat—responses that significantly damaged his credibility. The now-iconic photograph of Andrew with Virginia Giuffre and Epstein’s documented pattern of exploiting underage girls further intensified scrutiny, raising serious questions about the prince’s judgment, integrity, and transparency.Andrew has repeatedly declined opportunities to speak with U.S. authorities and has now let multiple congressional deadlines pass without cooperation, retreating into royal seclusion as public pressure mounts. The royal family has since removed many of his public roles and military honors in an effort to contain the damage, but the strategy has only highlighted the seriousness of the allegations and the depth of Andrew’s involvement with Epstein. His silence has become its own indictment, signaling fear rather than innocence, and reinforcing the perception that accountability is being avoided rather than confronted.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Nov 13min

Epstein Survivors Already Named Names — Some People Just Wanted a Different Storyline (11/20/25
A persistent misconception continues to circulate around the Epstein case: the belief that survivors have never identified individuals involved. In reality, numerous names have already been publicly stated in sworn testimony, court filings, and interviews. Among those named are former New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, former Senate majority leader George Mitchell, financier Glenn Dubin, scientist Marvin Minsky, billionaire retail magnate Les Wexner, investor Leon Black, Hyatt executive Thomas Pritzker, and Prince Andrew. These are not obscure figures; they are individuals of immense political and financial influence. Yet the public response has largely been silence, shaped by partisan distractions and misinformation that shifted attention away from real testimony in favor of viral conspiracy narratives. The issue is not that names have not been provided — it is that society has not acted on them.Survivors face intense pressure and legal intimidation when they come forward, including the threat of financially ruinous lawsuits from powerful defendants with vast legal resources, which has historically deterred additional testimony. This environment of fear has shielded the accused for decades, enabling them to operate without accountability. Many advocates and journalists have become increasingly vocal in rejecting that silence and calling for immediate action — demanding investigations, subpoenas, and legal consequences for the names already publicly identified. The question should no longer be, “Why aren’t survivors naming names?” but rather, “Why are the named individuals not being investigated?” Until there is movement on the existing record, continued calls for additional names serve only as a distraction from the urgent need for accountability.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Nov 12min

Donald Trump Signs The Epstein Transparency Bill Into Law (Part 2) (11/20/25)
President Donald Trump abruptly reversed his longstanding opposition to public disclosure of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein’s network, telling House Republicans to back a measure requiring the Department of Justice to release Epstein-related files. He previously labelled the disclosure effort a “hoax” and actively resisted it, but as bipartisan and intraparty pressure mounted—including from conservative lawmakers—the tide shifted and he pledged to sign the bill if passed.The legislation mandates the DOJ to publish all unclassified records tied to Epstein’s investigations within 30 days, with limited allowances for redactions only to protect victims or continuing probes; it explicitly bars withholding records on the basis of embarrassment or political sensitivity. The move comes amid growing scrutiny of Epstein’s ties to powerful figures and renewed demands for accountability, even as questions linger about Trump’s motivations for this pivot and whether it signals a genuine commitment to transparency or a tactical retreat under mounting pressure.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:How Trump reversed course on the Epstein files as his administration faces lingering suspicion about their release | CNN PoliticsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Nov 19min

Donald Trump Signs The Epstein Transparency Bill Into Law (Part 1) (11/20/25)
President Donald Trump abruptly reversed his longstanding opposition to public disclosure of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein’s network, telling House Republicans to back a measure requiring the Department of Justice to release Epstein-related files. He previously labelled the disclosure effort a “hoax” and actively resisted it, but as bipartisan and intraparty pressure mounted—including from conservative lawmakers—the tide shifted and he pledged to sign the bill if passed.The legislation mandates the DOJ to publish all unclassified records tied to Epstein’s investigations within 30 days, with limited allowances for redactions only to protect victims or continuing probes; it explicitly bars withholding records on the basis of embarrassment or political sensitivity. The move comes amid growing scrutiny of Epstein’s ties to powerful figures and renewed demands for accountability, even as questions linger about Trump’s motivations for this pivot and whether it signals a genuine commitment to transparency or a tactical retreat under mounting pressure.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:How Trump reversed course on the Epstein files as his administration faces lingering suspicion about their release | CNN PoliticsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Nov 15min

The Epstein Files: The DOJ Has the Crumbs, Langley Has the Cake (11/20/25)
Jeffrey Epstein’s story has long been framed as a failure of the Department of Justice, but the emerging picture suggests something far larger, deeper, and more strategically protected than bureaucratic incompetence. While the DOJ files may eventually expose mid-level accomplices and enablers—from recruiters to financial fixers—those records are widely seen as the leftovers, not the main course. The patterns surrounding Epstein’s rise, protection, wealth, connections, plea deals, and death point toward a man operating not as an independent criminal, but as an intelligence asset whose true handlers operated far above prosecutors and judges. The extraordinary legal shielding he enjoyed for decades, the global scope of his operation, and the immediate clampdown on information following his arrest and death align more with a covert intelligence compromise operation than with the actions of a rogue financier.Increasingly, investigators and observers argue that the CIA, not the DOJ, holds the real archive—tapes, testimonies, leverage files, operational memos, and the materials that could explain how a former prep-school math teacher became the center of a multinational blackmail network involving presidents, billionaires, royalty, and corporate and scientific elites. The stakes are not embarrassment, but system collapse: public acknowledgment that Epstein was a U.S.-built intelligence tool used to manufacture leverage over global power figures would undermine the myth of democratic control and reveal the extent of unelected power inside American governance. The pressure to release DOJ documents is important, but the real battlefield is Langley, where the answers to the central question—who built Jeffrey Epstein, and why—remain sealed behind national-security justifications. Until that vault opens, the truth remains incomplete, and accountability remains impossible.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Nov 22min

Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And The Deal That Never Materialized (11/20/25)
From the moment Ghislaine Maxwell was arrested in 2020, there was widespread speculation that she would eventually cut a deal with federal prosecutors. Many observers believed she held explosive information about Epstein’s most powerful associates—names that could devastate careers, shake institutions, and expose a sprawling web of enablers. The logic was simple: Maxwell was facing decades in prison, and prosecutors often rely on cooperation agreements to dismantle complex trafficking networks. The headlines, courtroom chatter, and legal commentators all echoed the same expectation—Maxwell would flip to save herself, and the public would finally learn the truth about who else participated, enabled, or benefited from Epstein’s criminal operation.But that deal never materialized, leaving many to question why. Throughout her trial and sentencing, Maxwell never publicly cooperated, never named names, and never provided the kind of testimonial firepower that so many assumed she possessed. Whether this silence was self-preservation, pressure from powerful figures, fear for her personal safety, or belief she could survive her sentence without betraying anyone remains a point of fierce debate. Ultimately, instead of becoming the prosecution’s star witness, Maxwell absorbed the full weight of her conviction and remains imprisoned without having triggered the broader reckoning many survivors, journalists, and the public expected. The absence of a cooperation deal has only intensified suspicion that the system was never truly willing to open that door.to contactme:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
20 Nov 31min





















