The Vault: The Epstein Files

The Captain Of Security Operations At MCC And His OIG Deposition (Part 9) (6/4/26)

14 min · 4. juni 2026
episode The Captain Of Security Operations At MCC And His OIG Deposition (Part 9) (6/4/26) cover

Description

The document is a sworn OIG interview transcript from June 15, 2021, involving the Bureau of Prisons captain who oversaw security operations at MCC New York during the period surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s death. The captain described the command structure inside the jail, including his role supervising lieutenants and reporting up to associate wardens or the warden, while investigators walked him through staffing, rosters, post assignments, suicide-watch procedures, SHU operations, and the chain of responsibility on August 9–10, 2019. The transcript is important because it does not present Epstein’s death as a clean, orderly institutional event; instead, it shows a jail struggling with bad staffing, confusing handoffs, unfilled posts, questionable paperwork, and a command structure where critical responsibilities appear to have been either missed, misunderstood, or passed around. The most serious value of the interview is in the irregularities it surfaces. The captain reportedly discussed inaccurate rosters or logs, acknowledged questions around skipped SHU rounds, addressed the fact that Epstein had previously been on suicide watch, and said he would not necessarily have known in real time if officers were failing to conduct required checks. Even more troubling, he expressed concern that certain documents may have been deliberately removed from files that should have been reviewed or audited, and investigators also raised an inmate-count issue involving an inmate named Reyes, whose release may not have been properly reflected in the institution’s count — something the captain treated as a protocol violation. Taken together, the transcript adds another layer to the larger Epstein death record: not a single clean explanation, but a bureaucratic mess of missing or questionable documentation, staffing failures, broken supervision, and institutional chaos at precisely the moment when the most high-profile federal inmate in America was supposed to be under careful control. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00111830.pdf [https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%209/EFTA00111830.pdf]

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episode Inside the White House Fallout Over the Epstein Files (Part 3) (6/11/26) artwork

Inside the White House Fallout Over the Epstein Files (Part 3) (6/11/26)

The Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein files has become a political disaster because years of promises about transparency ran headfirst into the Justice Department’s refusal to back the most explosive public expectations. Senior White House officials, including Vice President JD Vance, reportedly gathered without Trump in the Situation Room to manage the fallout after the DOJ and FBI said there was no “client list,” no confirmed blackmail operation, and that Epstein’s death was a suicide. That answer did not calm anything down. It infuriated survivors, transparency advocates, Democrats, and a large part of Trump’s own base, many of whom believed the administration had promised to expose the people Epstein protected, served, or compromised. The larger problem is that Epstein remains a trust-destroying scandal because the public has never believed the government gave a full accounting of who enabled him, who benefited from him, and who was protected when the system closed ranks. The White House tried to contain the issue, but the response only deepened the perception that powerful names were still being shielded. With Congress continuing to demand answers, major figures like Bill Gates being pulled into closed-door questioning, and polling showing broad public skepticism, the Epstein files have become more than a legal matter. They are now a political grenade, exposing the gap between campaign promises, institutional self-protection, and the public’s belief that elite accountability is still mostly theater. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Inside Trump’s White House, the Epstein Files Caused a Freakout - The New York Times [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/10/magazine/trump-epstein-files-white-house-vance-doj.html]

11. juni 202630 min
episode Inside the White House Fallout Over the Epstein Files (Part 2) (6/11/26) artwork

Inside the White House Fallout Over the Epstein Files (Part 2) (6/11/26)

The Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein files has become a political disaster because years of promises about transparency ran headfirst into the Justice Department’s refusal to back the most explosive public expectations. Senior White House officials, including Vice President JD Vance, reportedly gathered without Trump in the Situation Room to manage the fallout after the DOJ and FBI said there was no “client list,” no confirmed blackmail operation, and that Epstein’s death was a suicide. That answer did not calm anything down. It infuriated survivors, transparency advocates, Democrats, and a large part of Trump’s own base, many of whom believed the administration had promised to expose the people Epstein protected, served, or compromised. The larger problem is that Epstein remains a trust-destroying scandal because the public has never believed the government gave a full accounting of who enabled him, who benefited from him, and who was protected when the system closed ranks. The White House tried to contain the issue, but the response only deepened the perception that powerful names were still being shielded. With Congress continuing to demand answers, major figures like Bill Gates being pulled into closed-door questioning, and polling showing broad public skepticism, the Epstein files have become more than a legal matter. They are now a political grenade, exposing the gap between campaign promises, institutional self-protection, and the public’s belief that elite accountability is still mostly theater. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Inside Trump’s White House, the Epstein Files Caused a Freakout - The New York Times [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/10/magazine/trump-epstein-files-white-house-vance-doj.html]

11. juni 202621 min
episode Inside the White House Fallout Over the Epstein Files (Part 1) (6/11/26) artwork

Inside the White House Fallout Over the Epstein Files (Part 1) (6/11/26)

The Trump administration’s handling of the Epstein files has become a political disaster because years of promises about transparency ran headfirst into the Justice Department’s refusal to back the most explosive public expectations. Senior White House officials, including Vice President JD Vance, reportedly gathered without Trump in the Situation Room to manage the fallout after the DOJ and FBI said there was no “client list,” no confirmed blackmail operation, and that Epstein’s death was a suicide. That answer did not calm anything down. It infuriated survivors, transparency advocates, Democrats, and a large part of Trump’s own base, many of whom believed the administration had promised to expose the people Epstein protected, served, or compromised. The larger problem is that Epstein remains a trust-destroying scandal because the public has never believed the government gave a full accounting of who enabled him, who benefited from him, and who was protected when the system closed ranks. The White House tried to contain the issue, but the response only deepened the perception that powerful names were still being shielded. With Congress continuing to demand answers, major figures like Bill Gates being pulled into closed-door questioning, and polling showing broad public skepticism, the Epstein files have become more than a legal matter. They are now a political grenade, exposing the gap between campaign promises, institutional self-protection, and the public’s belief that elite accountability is still mostly theater. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Inside Trump’s White House, the Epstein Files Caused a Freakout - The New York Times [https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/10/magazine/trump-epstein-files-white-house-vance-doj.html]

11. juni 202620 min
episode Mega Edition: Bill Gates And His Less Than Honest Explanation Of His Epstein Ties (6/10/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Bill Gates And His Less Than Honest Explanation Of His Epstein Ties (6/10/26)

Bill Gates was not honest, or at minimum not fully forthcoming, about the true depth and consequences of his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. For years, the public explanation was basically that Gates met Epstein because he believed Epstein might help raise money for global health philanthropy, and Gates later called the relationship a “huge mistake.” But reporting has shown the relationship was more layered than that: Gates met with Epstein multiple times after Epstein’s 2008 conviction, Epstein had contact with people inside Gates’s professional orbit, and later records suggested Epstein tried to use knowledge of Gates’s private life as leverage in philanthropic and business dealings. Gates has denied doing anything illicit and has said he saw nothing illicit, but the steady drip of meetings, intermediaries, private entanglements, and reputational cleanup has made his earlier explanations look narrow, lawyered, and incomplete. That relationship has cost Gates in ways that go far beyond bad headlines. Melinda French Gates has said Epstein was one factor among many in the breakdown of their marriage, and reporting has tied her divorce concerns to Gates’s dealings with Epstein. Gates has also had to apologize to foundation staff, face renewed scrutiny over the Gates Foundation’s Epstein-adjacent contacts, and deal with damage to the carefully built image of the harmless sweater-wearing philanthropist who simply wants to save the world. The Epstein connection has become part of a broader public reassessment of Gates — not as proof that he committed Epstein’s crimes, but as evidence that he showed terrible judgment, kept company he never should have kept, and then failed to level with the public about how ugly that association really was. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

11. juni 20261 h 3 min
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