The Vault: The Epstein Files

Mega Edition: Even After Epstein's First Arrest The Invites Kept Rolling In (6/11/26)

53 min · 11. juni 2026
episode Mega Edition: Even After Epstein's First Arrest The Invites Kept Rolling In (6/11/26) cover

Description

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell were not treated like radioactive outcasts after Epstein’s first arrest; in many elite circles, they were still welcomed, tolerated, or quietly absorbed back into the social machinery of high society. Epstein’s 2006 arrest and 2008 conviction should have made him untouchable, but money, access, famous friends, private jets, philanthropy, and the protective manners of the ultra-wealthy helped soften the consequences. Maxwell, especially, remained a social bridge: polished, connected, fluent in the language of aristocrats, billionaires, academics, royals, and political insiders. She could move through rooms where Epstein himself might have been more awkward or conspicuous, and her presence helped normalize him even after the public record showed he was a convicted sex offender. That is what makes their post-arrest social access so damning. These were not obscure figures hiding on the margins; they were people with visible ties to royalty, finance, science, media, politics, and elite philanthropy, and many around them chose convenience over conscience. Invitations, dinners, conferences, private gatherings, and introductions continued because Epstein still had something powerful people valued: money, connections, mystique, and proximity to other powerful people. Maxwell helped launder that access socially, presenting Epstein’s world as glamorous, exclusive, and useful rather than predatory. In the end, their continued welcome in high society showed how elite networks can function as insulation, turning scandal into gossip, criminality into inconvenience, and victims into background noise. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the The Vault: The Epstein Files community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

998 episodes

episode Mega Edition: Even After Epstein's First Arrest The Invites Kept Rolling In (6/11/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Even After Epstein's First Arrest The Invites Kept Rolling In (6/11/26)

Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell were not treated like radioactive outcasts after Epstein’s first arrest; in many elite circles, they were still welcomed, tolerated, or quietly absorbed back into the social machinery of high society. Epstein’s 2006 arrest and 2008 conviction should have made him untouchable, but money, access, famous friends, private jets, philanthropy, and the protective manners of the ultra-wealthy helped soften the consequences. Maxwell, especially, remained a social bridge: polished, connected, fluent in the language of aristocrats, billionaires, academics, royals, and political insiders. She could move through rooms where Epstein himself might have been more awkward or conspicuous, and her presence helped normalize him even after the public record showed he was a convicted sex offender. That is what makes their post-arrest social access so damning. These were not obscure figures hiding on the margins; they were people with visible ties to royalty, finance, science, media, politics, and elite philanthropy, and many around them chose convenience over conscience. Invitations, dinners, conferences, private gatherings, and introductions continued because Epstein still had something powerful people valued: money, connections, mystique, and proximity to other powerful people. Maxwell helped launder that access socially, presenting Epstein’s world as glamorous, exclusive, and useful rather than predatory. In the end, their continued welcome in high society showed how elite networks can function as insulation, turning scandal into gossip, criminality into inconvenience, and victims into background noise. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

11. juni 202653 min
episode Mega Edition: The Competing Narratives Surrounding Epstein's Jail House "Incident" (6/10/26) artwork

Mega Edition: The Competing Narratives Surrounding Epstein's Jail House "Incident" (6/10/26)

David Schoen was one of the lawyers Jeffrey Epstein consulted near the end of his life, and his account matters because he says Epstein personally denied that the July 2019 neck-injury incident at the Metropolitan Correctional Center was a suicide attempt. According to Schoen, Epstein told him that his cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, had caused the injury during what was described as some kind of “experiment,” “prank,” or jailhouse incident involving something placed around Epstein’s neck. Schoen has said Epstein claimed he stayed quiet because he did not want to be labeled suicidal and placed under the restrictions that would come with suicide watch. The Tartaglione claim remains one of the murkier pieces of the Epstein jail timeline because the accounts shifted. Reporting and later records indicate Epstein initially blamed Tartaglione for the injuries, then later walked that back during an internal prison interview, saying he did not feel threatened and attributing the episode to insomnia or distress. Tartaglione has repeatedly denied harming Epstein, and an internal prison investigation reportedly cleared him of responsibility, but the episode still matters because it raises obvious questions about MCC supervision, the handling of Epstein’s mental-health status, and why a detainee with Epstein’s profile was left in such a volatile and poorly monitored environment in the first place. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

11. juni 20261 h 1 min
episode Dual Sovereignty: The Legal Sledgehammer Waiting for Ghislaine Maxwell If Pardoned (Part 2) artwork

Dual Sovereignty: The Legal Sledgehammer Waiting for Ghislaine Maxwell If Pardoned (Part 2)

If Donald Trump were to issue a presidential pardon to Ghislaine Maxwell for her federal crimes, the doctrine of dual sovereignty could allow the state of New York to pursue separate charges against her without violating the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. This legal principle recognizes that the federal government and state governments are distinct sovereigns, each with the authority to enforce their own laws. Therefore, a pardon at the federal level does not immunize a person from state prosecution for conduct that also violates state law. If Maxwell’s actions—such as recruiting and trafficking minors—also violated New York state statutes, she could face a new, independent indictment from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office or New York Attorney General, regardless of the federal pardon. New York has already demonstrated its willingness to pursue high-profile sex trafficking and abuse cases, particularly when federal accountability fails or falters. The state has broad human trafficking, sexual abuse, and child endangerment laws that overlap with Maxwell’s federally convicted conduct. If prosecutors believe there is sufficient evidence that Maxwell’s crimes occurred within New York’s jurisdiction or harmed residents of the state, they could initiate charges anew under state law. In fact, the political and public appetite for state-level accountability could intensify following a federal pardon, as it would be seen by many as a miscarriage of justice. In that case, dual sovereignty becomes not just a legal tool—but a last-resort mechanism to ensure that Maxwell still faces consequences. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

11. juni 202611 min
episode Dual Sovereignty: The Legal Sledgehammer Waiting for Ghislaine Maxwell If Pardoned (Part 1) artwork

Dual Sovereignty: The Legal Sledgehammer Waiting for Ghislaine Maxwell If Pardoned (Part 1)

If Donald Trump were to issue a presidential pardon to Ghislaine Maxwell for her federal crimes, the doctrine of dual sovereignty could allow the state of New York to pursue separate charges against her without violating the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. This legal principle recognizes that the federal government and state governments are distinct sovereigns, each with the authority to enforce their own laws. Therefore, a pardon at the federal level does not immunize a person from state prosecution for conduct that also violates state law. If Maxwell’s actions—such as recruiting and trafficking minors—also violated New York state statutes, she could face a new, independent indictment from the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office or New York Attorney General, regardless of the federal pardon. New York has already demonstrated its willingness to pursue high-profile sex trafficking and abuse cases, particularly when federal accountability fails or falters. The state has broad human trafficking, sexual abuse, and child endangerment laws that overlap with Maxwell’s federally convicted conduct. If prosecutors believe there is sufficient evidence that Maxwell’s crimes occurred within New York’s jurisdiction or harmed residents of the state, they could initiate charges anew under state law. In fact, the political and public appetite for state-level accountability could intensify following a federal pardon, as it would be seen by many as a miscarriage of justice. In that case, dual sovereignty becomes not just a legal tool—but a last-resort mechanism to ensure that Maxwell still faces consequences. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

11. juni 202611 min
episode Virginia Robert's Rejects Ghislaine Maxwell's Summary Judgement Push (Part 9) artwork

Virginia Robert's Rejects Ghislaine Maxwell's Summary Judgement Push (Part 9)

Virginia Giuffre’s response to Ghislaine Maxwell’s motion for summary judgment was a direct challenge to Maxwell’s attempt to dismiss the case without a trial. In her filing, Giuffre argued that Maxwell’s statements denying any wrongdoing were not only defamatory, but made with actual malice—because Maxwell knew they were false when she made them. Giuffre’s legal team submitted sworn testimony, supporting documentation, and detailed timelines to establish that Maxwell had played a central role in Epstein’s trafficking operation and that her denials were part of a broader effort to discredit and silence victims. Virginia Giuffre’s response to Ghislaine Maxwell’s motion for summary judgment was a direct challenge to Maxwell’s attempt to dismiss the case without a trial. In her filing, Giuffre argued that Maxwell’s statements denying any wrongdoing were not only defamatory, but made with actual malice—because Maxwell knew they were false when she made them. Giuffre’s legal team submitted sworn testimony, supporting documentation, and detailed timelines to establish that Maxwell had played a central role in Epstein’s trafficking operation and that her denials were part of a broader effort to discredit and silence victims. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Giuffre-unseal.pdf (courthousenews.com) [https://www.courthousenews.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Giuffre-unseal.pdf]

11. juni 202616 min