The Vault: The Epstein Files

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Revolving Door Of A List Lawyers (6/4/26)

50 min · 4. Juni 2026
Episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Revolving Door Of A List Lawyers (6/4/26) Cover

Beschreibung

Darren Indyke was one of Jeffrey Epstein’s longest-serving and most important lawyers, operating less like a courtroom-only defense attorney and more like a central legal-business figure inside Epstein’s private empire. He handled Epstein-related corporate, estate, trust, and legal affairs for years, was named as one of the executors of Epstein’s estate, and later became a major figure in litigation brought by victims who alleged that Epstein’s financial and legal infrastructure helped facilitate and conceal abuse. Indyke and Epstein accountant Richard Kahn were accused in civil litigation of helping maintain the machinery around Epstein, though they denied wrongdoing and reached a settlement without admitting liability. Indyke’s role matters because he was not simply a late-stage defense lawyer brought in after arrest; he was embedded in Epstein’s long-term legal and financial structure. Ken Starr entered Epstein’s orbit during the Florida federal investigation and became part of the high-powered legal team that helped Epstein secure the infamous 2008 non-prosecution agreement. Starr’s involvement was especially controversial because he had been one of the most famous prosecutors in America, yet in Epstein’s case he helped apply pressure from the defense side during the negotiations that produced a deal widely condemned as extraordinarily lenient. David Schoen also represented Epstein briefly near the end of Epstein’s life in 2019, visiting him shortly before his death and later speaking publicly about Epstein and the unresolved questions surrounding the case. Taken together, Indyke, Starr, and Schoen represent three different layers of Epstein’s legal protection: the longtime insider lawyer, the elite plea-deal strategist, and the late-stage criminal defense attorney brought in during Epstein’s final federal prosecution. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der The Vault: The Epstein Files-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

998 Folgen

Episode Trump Turns to Ghislaine Maxwell in Wall Street Journal Defamation Fight (6/4/26) Cover

Trump Turns to Ghislaine Maxwell in Wall Street Journal Defamation Fight (6/4/26)

Donald Trump has refiled his $10 billion defamation lawsuit against The Wall Street Journal over its reporting on an alleged birthday letter to Jeffrey Epstein that was said to have appeared in a 2003 birthday album compiled by Ghislaine Maxwell. Trump denies writing the letter and his amended complaint continues to argue that no authentic letter or drawing exists, even though the House Oversight Committee later released the letter after obtaining it from Epstein’s estate. The renewed lawsuit comes after a federal judge dismissed Trump’s first version in April, finding that his legal team had not adequately pleaded “actual malice,” the demanding defamation standard public officials must meet when suing news organizations. The amended filing brings Ghislaine Maxwell into the case by pointing to her July 2025 interview with then-Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, in which she said she did not remember Trump submitting a letter, card, or note for Epstein’s birthday album. Trump’s lawyers are trying to use that statement to bolster the claim that the Journal published something false or recklessly unsupported, but the timing creates an obvious complication because Maxwell’s interview occurred after the Journal’s original reporting. The case now turns on whether Trump can prove that The Wall Street Journal, Dow Jones, News Corp, Rupert Murdoch, and the named reporters knowingly published false information or acted with reckless disregard for the truth, rather than simply reporting aggressively on a disputed Epstein-related document. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Trump Cites Maxwell In $10 Billion 'Wall Street Journal' Lawsuit [https://okmagazine.com/p/donald-trump-ghislaine-maxwell-wall-street-journal-lawsuit-epstein-letter/]

4. Juni 202611 min
Episode Epstein’s Brokerage Trail: Fidelity and the Millions That Moved Before His Arrest (6/4/26) Cover

Epstein’s Brokerage Trail: Fidelity and the Millions That Moved Before His Arrest (6/4/26)

Fidelity opened a brokerage account for a Jeffrey Epstein-owned company in mid-April 2019, just months before Epstein’s July 2019 arrest and at a time when public outrage over his earlier sweetheart deal was already intensifying. The account was opened for Southern Trust Company, Epstein’s Virgin Islands-based entity, and it received more than $5 million before Fidelity apparently moved to restrict it to “closing transactions only” in late May 2019. The account was disclosed in a suspicious activity report filed after Epstein’s arrest, and the details came from a Justice Department file that was briefly released as part of Epstein-related disclosures before later being replaced with a fully redacted version. The timing is the central issue: Fidelity opened the account after the Miami Herald’s major 2018 reporting had renewed scrutiny of Epstein, after a federal judge ruled that DOJ had violated victims’ rights in the 2008 deal, and after more than 100 lawmakers had demanded that DOJ reopen the Epstein investigation. The Fidelity account reportedly moved millions, including funds wired from Deutsche Bank and later large transfers to Puerto Rican banks, before the account appeared to be emptied by the time Fidelity filed its SAR. The revelation adds Fidelity to the list of major financial institutions that handled Epstein-linked money, alongside JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, and Charles Schwab, and it raises the same core question that has followed the Epstein money trail for years: why did powerful financial institutions continue servicing him even when the public record already made him radioactive? to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Fidelity opened account for Epstein, even as outrage grew - ICIJ [https://www.icij.org/news/2026/06/fidelity-opened-account-for-epstein-even-as-outrage-grew/]

4. Juni 202612 min
Episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Revolving Door Of A List Lawyers (6/4/26) Cover

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Revolving Door Of A List Lawyers (6/4/26)

Darren Indyke was one of Jeffrey Epstein’s longest-serving and most important lawyers, operating less like a courtroom-only defense attorney and more like a central legal-business figure inside Epstein’s private empire. He handled Epstein-related corporate, estate, trust, and legal affairs for years, was named as one of the executors of Epstein’s estate, and later became a major figure in litigation brought by victims who alleged that Epstein’s financial and legal infrastructure helped facilitate and conceal abuse. Indyke and Epstein accountant Richard Kahn were accused in civil litigation of helping maintain the machinery around Epstein, though they denied wrongdoing and reached a settlement without admitting liability. Indyke’s role matters because he was not simply a late-stage defense lawyer brought in after arrest; he was embedded in Epstein’s long-term legal and financial structure. Ken Starr entered Epstein’s orbit during the Florida federal investigation and became part of the high-powered legal team that helped Epstein secure the infamous 2008 non-prosecution agreement. Starr’s involvement was especially controversial because he had been one of the most famous prosecutors in America, yet in Epstein’s case he helped apply pressure from the defense side during the negotiations that produced a deal widely condemned as extraordinarily lenient. David Schoen also represented Epstein briefly near the end of Epstein’s life in 2019, visiting him shortly before his death and later speaking publicly about Epstein and the unresolved questions surrounding the case. Taken together, Indyke, Starr, and Schoen represent three different layers of Epstein’s legal protection: the longtime insider lawyer, the elite plea-deal strategist, and the late-stage criminal defense attorney brought in during Epstein’s final federal prosecution. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

4. Juni 202650 min
Episode Mega Edition: The Royal Family And The Palace Pest Known As Andrew (6/4/26) Cover

Mega Edition: The Royal Family And The Palace Pest Known As Andrew (6/4/26)

Prince Andrew’s reputation inside the royal household has long been portrayed as deeply unpopular, especially among people who worked around him rather than above him. Former palace staff and royal insiders have described him as arrogant, entitled, short-tempered, and needlessly difficult, with accounts alleging that he barked orders, swore at staff, expected extreme deference, and treated palace employees as if they existed purely to absorb his demands. One of the most widely repeated examples involved his reported obsession with how his teddy bears were arranged, with staff allegedly given instructions on their exact placement. Other accounts described him as dismissive toward servants, rude to aides, and furious when ordinary inconveniences interrupted him. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

4. Juni 202647 min
Episode Mega Edition: The Many Layers That Made Up The Friendship Of Andrew And Ghislaine (6/3/26) Cover

Mega Edition: The Many Layers That Made Up The Friendship Of Andrew And Ghislaine (6/3/26)

Prince Andrew and Ghislaine Maxwell were repeatedly described as unusually close, long-running friends whose relationship predated much of the public Epstein scandal and helped place Andrew inside Epstein’s social orbit. Andrew has said he knew Maxwell from her university years at Oxford, and he has acknowledged that he met Epstein through her, although later accounts and released records have raised questions about the exact timeline. Over the years, Andrew and Maxwell were photographed and reported together in elite social settings in New York, London, and elsewhere, with Maxwell functioning as a bridge between Andrew and Epstein’s world. Their closeness became central to the scandal because Maxwell was not some distant acquaintance in Andrew’s life; she was a trusted social contact with access to him, his homes, and his circle. That relationship did not simply vanish once Maxwell was arrested and later convicted. Publicly, Andrew distanced himself from the entire Epstein network, but reporting and released materials have continued to suggest that the bond between Andrew and Maxwell remained warmer and more complicated than the official posture implied. Maxwell herself referred to Andrew as a “dear friend” after her conviction and said she still cared about what was happening to him, while later Epstein-file releases included emails believed to be between Andrew and Maxwell, including one in which the sender appeared to ask about “new inappropriate friends.” The picture that emerges is of a friendship that became politically and legally toxic, forcing it out of public view, but not necessarily erasing the personal loyalty and familiarity that had existed for years. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

4. Juni 202644 min