Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

One Year In, The Epstein Inquiry Still Has More Questions Than Answers (7/8/26)

15 min · 8. juli 2026
episode One Year In, The Epstein Inquiry Still Has More Questions Than Answers (7/8/26) cover

Beskrivelse

Congress’s Epstein inquiry has now been running for nearly a year, but the investigation has produced far more frustration than accountability. Lawmakers have interviewed major figures, pushed for file releases, questioned former officials, and leaned on the Justice Department for answers, yet they still have little to show when it comes to criminal culpability beyond Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Survivors and members of Congress remain angry that the government has not clearly explained why more people in Epstein’s orbit have not faced investigation or prosecution, especially given the years of allegations, financial trails, and powerful associations surrounding him. The inquiry has also exposed continuing distrust of the DOJ, particularly over redactions, delayed releases, and the handling of sensitive records. The central problem is that the investigation has become a test of whether Congress can force real transparency from institutions that have spent years managing the Epstein fallout instead of fully resolving it. Survivors are still demanding recognition, accountability, and a clear accounting of how Epstein was allowed to operate for so long, while lawmakers are still chasing basic answers about government failures, possible financial crimes, and the people who enabled or benefited from his network. The inquiry has created headlines and political pressure, but not the kind of definitive reckoning many expected. One year in, the Epstein investigation remains stuck in the same familiar place: documents released in pieces, officials dodging hard questions, survivors left unsatisfied, and the public still wondering who was protected and why. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: One year in, Epstein inquiry has found few answers | National Post [https://nationalpost.com/news/world/one-year-in-epstein-inquiry-has-found-few-answers]

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episode How The Graham Platner Scandal Undercut Democratic Epstein Messaging (7/8/26) cover

How The Graham Platner Scandal Undercut Democratic Epstein Messaging (7/8/26)

Democrats have spent the past year using the Epstein issue as a platform for moral outrage, demanding transparency, accountability, and consequences for powerful people who looked the other way. But the Graham Platner scandal exposes the same selective blindness inside their own political operation. Platner was elevated as an authentic, populist Democratic Senate candidate despite serious warning signs, public controversies, and disturbing allegations that eventually made him politically radioactive. The central hypocrisy is not that Democrats were wrong to pursue Epstein accountability, but that they preached about institutional protection and survivor-centered justice while tolerating a deeply flawed candidate when he was useful to their own electoral goals. The collapse of support for Platner only came after the scandal became impossible to manage, making the party’s moral posture look more like damage control than principle. If Democrats argue that proximity, silence, enabling, and ignored red flags matter in the Epstein world, then those same standards must apply in their own backyard. Endorsements are transfers of credibility, and the politicians who boosted Platner cannot simply walk away once the cost becomes too high. The larger point is that selective morality poisons public trust: a party cannot credibly condemn coverups and institutional cowardice while excusing its own version of political convenience, delayed outrage, and strategic blindness. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

8. juli 202620 min
episode One Year In, The Epstein Inquiry Still Has More Questions Than Answers (7/8/26) cover

One Year In, The Epstein Inquiry Still Has More Questions Than Answers (7/8/26)

Congress’s Epstein inquiry has now been running for nearly a year, but the investigation has produced far more frustration than accountability. Lawmakers have interviewed major figures, pushed for file releases, questioned former officials, and leaned on the Justice Department for answers, yet they still have little to show when it comes to criminal culpability beyond Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. Survivors and members of Congress remain angry that the government has not clearly explained why more people in Epstein’s orbit have not faced investigation or prosecution, especially given the years of allegations, financial trails, and powerful associations surrounding him. The inquiry has also exposed continuing distrust of the DOJ, particularly over redactions, delayed releases, and the handling of sensitive records. The central problem is that the investigation has become a test of whether Congress can force real transparency from institutions that have spent years managing the Epstein fallout instead of fully resolving it. Survivors are still demanding recognition, accountability, and a clear accounting of how Epstein was allowed to operate for so long, while lawmakers are still chasing basic answers about government failures, possible financial crimes, and the people who enabled or benefited from his network. The inquiry has created headlines and political pressure, but not the kind of definitive reckoning many expected. One year in, the Epstein investigation remains stuck in the same familiar place: documents released in pieces, officials dodging hard questions, survivors left unsatisfied, and the public still wondering who was protected and why. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: One year in, Epstein inquiry has found few answers | National Post [https://nationalpost.com/news/world/one-year-in-epstein-inquiry-has-found-few-answers]

8. juli 202615 min
episode Follow the Money, Hit the Redactions: DOJ’s Latest Epstein Transparency Problem (7/8/26) cover

Follow the Money, Hit the Redactions: DOJ’s Latest Epstein Transparency Problem (7/8/26)

According to new reports The Justice Department quietly redacted bank fraud alerts from Epstein-related files involving an Epstein-owned company that allegedly continued moving millions of dollars even after Jeffrey Epstein’s death. The redacted records were Suspicious Activity Reports, or SARs, which banks file with the government when they detect transactions that may involve fraud, money laundering, or other suspicious financial activity. The company at the center of the report is described as part of Epstein’s financial machinery, and the key issue is not merely that the transactions existed, but that the DOJ’s public release allegedly obscured the very alerts that could help explain how money kept moving through Epstein-linked entities after he was dead. The larger problem is that this fits into the same pattern that has surrounded the Epstein files from the beginning: the government claims redactions are about protecting victims and sensitive information, while critics argue the blackouts keep shielding the financial structure, institutional failures, and powerful people connected to the case. DOJ’s own disclosure page says redactions were applied for victim-identifying information, personal identifiers, grand jury material, and other legally protected categories, but this report raises the obvious question of why bank fraud alerts tied to Epstein’s money movement would be hidden from public view. In other words, the issue is not just another botched file release; it is another example of the public being told transparency is happening while some of the most important trails — especially the money trail — remain buried behind black bars. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: DOJ caught redacting files on Epstein company that moved millions after his death - Raw Story [https://www.rawstory.com/doj-epstein-bank-redactions/]

8. juli 202611 min
episode Prince Andrew’s Alibi And The Establishment’s Missing Spine (7/8/26) cover

Prince Andrew’s Alibi And The Establishment’s Missing Spine (7/8/26)

Prince Andrew’s infamous Pizza Express alibi is framed as more than just an absurd footnote in the Epstein scandal; it is presented as a symbol of institutional cowardice and elite protection. The core outrage is that a chain restaurant appeared more motivated to scrutinize the Woking claim than Scotland Yard or the broader British establishment seemed to be. Instead of treating Andrew’s statement as a serious, testable alibi that demanded receipts, staff interviews, timelines, records, and hard verification, the system let it become a joke, a meme, and a public spectacle. The monologue argues that if Andrew had been an ordinary man, investigators would have ripped the claim apart immediately, but because he was royal, the response became cautious, delicate, and deferential. The deeper point is that the Pizza Express story exposes the double standard at the heart of the Epstein fallout: survivors are relentlessly questioned, doubted, and dissected, while powerful men are granted space, patience, and institutional softness. Andrew’s alibi is portrayed as a ridiculous but revealing window into how the justice system behaves differently when titles, palaces, reputations, and establishment interests are involved. The outrage is not really about pizza or Woking, but about a system that seems aggressive when dealing with the powerless and suddenly timid when confronting the powerful. In that sense, the monologue presents the Pizza Express episode as a humiliating emblem of royal exceptionalism, where a survivor gets a microscope, a prince gets a cushion, and accountability gets buried under privilege. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

8. juli 202611 min
episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Video That Vanished (7/8/25) cover

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The Video That Vanished (7/8/25)

After Jeffrey Epstein’s first reported suicide attempt at MCC New York in July 2019, one of the most important pieces of evidence should have been surveillance footage from outside the cell area where he was being held with former police officer Nicholas Tartaglione. That video mattered because Epstein reportedly told lawyers that Tartaglione had attacked him, while other accounts suggested Epstein may have harmed himself or staged something to get moved. Either way, the camera footage should have helped clarify what happened during one of the most consequential moments before Epstein’s death. Instead, when Tartaglione’s defense team sought the footage, prosecutors first indicated it had been preserved, only to later admit that the wrong video had been saved and that the relevant footage was gone. The explanation was that MCC staff had mistakenly preserved footage from the wrong tier, while the actual footage from outside Epstein’s cell had been overwritten by the jail’s surveillance system. That explanation has never satisfied critics because it lands in the middle of a case already defined by impossible coincidences, bureaucratic failures, and missing accountability. The public was asked to believe that, in one of the most scrutinized federal detainee situations in modern history, the Bureau of Prisons failed to preserve basic surveillance footage from the first major warning sign before Epstein died. Even worse, the loss of that footage did not produce a clear, public accounting that answered the obvious questions: who was responsible for preserving it, who checked whether the correct footage had been saved, why the mistake was not discovered sooner, and why no one appeared to face meaningful consequences for losing evidence tied to Epstein’s safety. The result is a vacuum where suspicion thrives, because the official explanation may describe a clerical or technical failure, but it does not rationally explain how the federal government mishandled evidence this important in a case this explosive. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

8. juli 202654 min