The Vault: The Epstein Files

The Pam Bondi Congressional Oversight Committee Epstein Related Transcript (Part 1) (6/6/26)

15 min · 6. juni 2026
episode The Pam Bondi Congressional Oversight Committee Epstein Related Transcript (Part 1) (6/6/26) cover

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Pam Bondi’s congressional transcript showed her trying to defend the Justice Department’s handling of the Epstein files while repeatedly distancing herself from the day-to-day mechanics of the review. She told House Oversight lawmakers that Todd Blanche was the official “in charge” of the Epstein records process, saying she did not personally conduct the document review and that the work had been delegated to him. Bondi acknowledged that mistakes were made, including redaction problems, but framed the release as a massive and difficult undertaking rather than a deliberate attempt to obstruct transparency. At the same time, she insisted the department was committed to accountability, even as lawmakers pressed her on why the disclosures remained incomplete, flawed, or slow-moving. The transcript also showed Bondi trying to avoid directly blaming Blanche while making clear that he was the person managing the release. She praised him as ethical and capable, but Democrats seized on her answers as evidence that Blanche, along with other DOJ and FBI officials, should be brought before Congress to explain the process in detail. Bondi also said she learned about Ghislaine Maxwell’s prison transfer from news reports, denied involvement in that decision, rejected the idea of a Maxwell pardon, and refused to discuss private conversations with Donald Trump. The result was a transcript that did not settle the Epstein files controversy, but instead widened the accountability fight by making clear that Congress still does not have a clean answer on who controlled the review, why errors happened, and whether the public has truly received the full record. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Final-Bondi-Transcript.pdf [https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Final-Bondi-Transcript.pdf]

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episode The Pam Bondi Congressional Oversight Committee Epstein Related Transcript (Part 1) (6/6/26) artwork

The Pam Bondi Congressional Oversight Committee Epstein Related Transcript (Part 1) (6/6/26)

Pam Bondi’s congressional transcript showed her trying to defend the Justice Department’s handling of the Epstein files while repeatedly distancing herself from the day-to-day mechanics of the review. She told House Oversight lawmakers that Todd Blanche was the official “in charge” of the Epstein records process, saying she did not personally conduct the document review and that the work had been delegated to him. Bondi acknowledged that mistakes were made, including redaction problems, but framed the release as a massive and difficult undertaking rather than a deliberate attempt to obstruct transparency. At the same time, she insisted the department was committed to accountability, even as lawmakers pressed her on why the disclosures remained incomplete, flawed, or slow-moving. The transcript also showed Bondi trying to avoid directly blaming Blanche while making clear that he was the person managing the release. She praised him as ethical and capable, but Democrats seized on her answers as evidence that Blanche, along with other DOJ and FBI officials, should be brought before Congress to explain the process in detail. Bondi also said she learned about Ghislaine Maxwell’s prison transfer from news reports, denied involvement in that decision, rejected the idea of a Maxwell pardon, and refused to discuss private conversations with Donald Trump. The result was a transcript that did not settle the Epstein files controversy, but instead widened the accountability fight by making clear that Congress still does not have a clean answer on who controlled the review, why errors happened, and whether the public has truly received the full record. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Final-Bondi-Transcript.pdf [https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Final-Bondi-Transcript.pdf]

6. juni 202615 min
episode Mega Edition: Kathlyn Ruemmler And The Ghost Of Jeffrey Epstein (6/5/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Kathlyn Ruemmler And The Ghost Of Jeffrey Epstein (6/5/26)

Kathryn “Kathy” Ruemmler’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein became a major reputational crisis because it was not presented as a brief, distant, or accidental association. Newly released DOJ Epstein files and prior reporting showed that Ruemmler, a former Obama White House counsel who later became Goldman Sachs’ chief legal officer and general counsel, maintained friendly contact with Epstein years after his 2008 conviction. The communications reportedly included warm personal language, gifts, career discussions, and advice about how Epstein could handle media scrutiny over his crimes. Ruemmler has said she never represented Epstein as a lawyer, did nothing wrong, did not know about ongoing criminal conduct, and regrets ever knowing him, but the released material badly undercut any attempt to portray the relationship as minor or incidental. The problem for Goldman Sachs was obvious: Ruemmler was not just another executive, she was the bank’s top lawyer and a senior figure responsible for legal, regulatory, and reputational judgment. Once the Epstein communications became public, the optics became untenable for someone whose job was to help safeguard the institution’s integrity. Ruemmler announced she would step down as Goldman Sachs’ chief legal officer and general counsel effective June 30, 2026, saying her responsibility was to put Goldman Sachs’ interests first. Her resignation became one of the most significant U.S. professional consequences tied to the latest Epstein file releases, showing again how Epstein’s network did not merely stain reputations by association, but exposed the judgment of powerful people who stayed close to him long after the public already knew what he was. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

6. juni 202657 min
episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And Those At The Very Top Of The Modeling Industry (6/6/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And Those At The Very Top Of The Modeling Industry (6/6/26)

Faith Kates’ exit from Next Management became another example of the Epstein files turning old relationships into present-day professional consequences. Kates, the co-founder of Next, had long been known as a major figure in the modeling world, but newly released Epstein materials and follow-up reporting painted her relationship with him as far deeper than a passing association. The files showed years of warm, personal communication, business discussions, apparent advice from Epstein, and troubling exchanges involving models or aspiring models even after his 2008 conviction. Kates stepped down from Next in late 2025, officially citing personal reasons and charity work, but the timing and the later revelations made that explanation look incomplete at best. Once the emails and references became public, Next moved to distance itself from her, saying her Epstein relationship was unknown to current management and that the company was working to end all legal ties with her. In practical terms, the Epstein revelations turned Kates from a powerful agency founder into a liability. The Brunel side of the story shows how deeply Epstein’s orbit overlapped with the mainstream fashion and retail ecosystem before Epstein’s second arrest in 2019. Jean-Luc Brunel’s MC2 Model Management, which had Epstein ties and was later scrutinized over allegations that it helped supply young women into Epstein’s world, was not operating in some obscure corner of the industry. Reporting linked MC2 to major retailers and brands including Victoria’s Secret, Nordstrom, Macy’s, Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus, JCPenney, Kohl’s, Target, Sears, and Belk. Some companies later minimized the relationship or said the work was limited, but the larger point is brutal: Brunel’s agency had enough legitimacy to operate inside the commercial bloodstream of American retail while Epstein’s history was already publicly known. That is what makes the modeling-agency angle so disturbing—not just the individual allegations, but the way a loosely regulated industry, powerful retailers, wealthy men, scouts, agencies, visas, housing, and access all overlapped in a system where vulnerable young women could be treated like inventory long before the public reckoning finally arrived. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

6. juni 202640 min
episode Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Lack Of Remorse (6/6/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Lack Of Remorse (6/6/26)

Ghislaine Maxwell tells the tale of someone morally bankrupt because her public story is not simply about proximity to Jeffrey Epstein, but about participation, access, denial, and calculation. She was not some distant social acquaintance who brushed against a scandal by accident; she was convicted in federal court for helping Epstein recruit and groom underage girls, and that conviction permanently defines the core of her role in the case. What makes her story so grotesque is the contrast between the world she came from and the world she helped build around Epstein: elite rooms, powerful names, private planes, mansions, money, status, and social polish wrapped around the exploitation of vulnerable girls. Maxwell’s moral failure was not merely that she associated with Epstein; it was that she used her intelligence, privilege, charm, and access to help normalize him, protect him, and make his operation seem respectable to people who should have known better. That is the portrait of moral bankruptcy: not ignorance, not confusion, not naivety, but the willingness to treat other human beings as disposable pieces inside a system built for power, gratification, and protection. Her continued posture after Epstein’s death only deepens that portrait, because Maxwell has repeatedly tried to recast herself as misunderstood, overpunished, or somehow separate from the machinery she helped operate. But the central fact remains that survivors described a system in which trust was weaponized, and Maxwell was convicted of playing a role in that system. The moral emptiness of her story lies in the absence of real public accountability, the refusal to meaningfully reckon with the damage done, and the persistent attempt to shift the frame away from the victims and back onto herself. In that sense, Maxwell is not just a disgraced associate of Epstein; she is a case study in how elite social circles can launder cruelty through manners, money, and connections until abuse is hidden behind chandeliers and introductions. Her downfall is not tragic. The tragedy belongs to the girls who were manipulated, abused, ignored, and forced to spend years fighting to be believed while people like Maxwell lived behind walls of privilege and denial. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

6. juni 202643 min
episode The Deposition Of Epstein's Chief Pilot Larry Visoski (Volume 2) (6/6/26) artwork

The Deposition Of Epstein's Chief Pilot Larry Visoski (Volume 2) (6/6/26)

In his October 2009 deposition, taken during the Jeffrey Epstein v. Bradley Edwards defamation lawsuit, longtime Epstein pilot Larry Visoski described his decades of employment under Epstein and the routine nature of his work. Questioned by victims’ attorney Bradley Edwards, Visoski confirmed that he had flown Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and numerous guests—some of them prominent figures—across Epstein’s properties in New York, Florida, New Mexico, and the Virgin Islands. Represented by Critton & Reinhardt, Visoski repeatedly emphasized that his duties were strictly professional: piloting aircraft, maintaining schedules, and ensuring safe transport. When pressed about the ages of female passengers, he claimed he never knowingly flew minors and denied witnessing any sexual activity or misconduct aboard Epstein’s planes. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

6. juni 20261 h 6 min