Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

One Percent Truth: How the DOJ Gutted the Epstein Transparency Law

15 min · I går
episode One Percent Truth: How the DOJ Gutted the Epstein Transparency Law cover

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By the DOJ’s own actions, what was promised as a meaningful step toward transparency has instead turned into a masterclass in bad faith. Despite a clear legal mandate requiring the release of Epstein-related records by December 19th, the Department of Justice has released roughly 1% of what it was obligated to disclose. Not 1% of what was convenient. Not 1% of what they felt like parting with. One percent of the total universe of documents they have publicly acknowledged possessing. This is not a paperwork hiccup or a minor delay—it is an institutional refusal to comply with the spirit or the letter of the law. For decades, the DOJ has insisted that Epstein was thoroughly investigated, that the evidence was reviewed, that the case was handled—yet when transparency is finally required, the files suddenly become too numerous, too complex, and too sensitive to release on time. The contradiction is glaring: either these materials were already organized and understood, or the DOJ has been misleading the public for years about the depth and seriousness of its investigation. For survivors, this isn’t just bureaucratic nonsense—it’s a direct insult. Many of them waited decades to be believed, to see the system acknowledge what was done to them and who enabled it. Releasing a token sliver of records while slow-walking the rest sends a clear message: institutional self-protection still outweighs accountability. To the American public, it’s an unmistakable middle finger—proof that even when Congress acts, even when the law is explicit, the DOJ believes it can stall, obfuscate, and wear people down through attrition. Transparency delayed is transparency denied, and in this case, the delay isn’t accidental. It reinforces the same power imbalance that allowed Epstein to operate in plain sight for so long, signaling that when powerful interests are implicated, justice remains optional and accountability remains negotiable. to  contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Justice Department has released only 1% of Epstein files, new filing says [https://www.scrippsnews.com/us-news/crime/epstein-files/justice-department-has-released-only-1-percent-of-epstein-files-new-filing-says#google_vignette]

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episode Mega Edition: Prince Andrew And The Blindside He Never Saw Coming (7/3/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Prince Andrew And The Blindside He Never Saw Coming (7/3/26)

According to source accounts surrounding the lawsuit, Prince Andrew was caught flat-footed by Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s decision to take him into a U.S. federal court rather than simply continue the fight through interviews, public statements, and media pressure. The lawsuit, filed in August 2021 in the Southern District of New York, accused Andrew of sexual assault and intentional infliction of emotional distress tied to Giuffre’s allegation that Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell trafficked her to him when she was 17. Andrew denied the allegations, but the filing changed the entire battlefield: this was no longer just a reputational crisis or another ugly Epstein headline. It became a live civil case with discovery, depositions, court deadlines, service fights, and the possibility that Andrew would be forced to answer questions under oath. The “blindsided” part matters because Andrew and his camp appeared to believe they still had legal escape routes, especially the 2009 settlement between Giuffre and Epstein, which they argued should shield him from liability. But Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected the attempt to dismiss the case in January 2022, finding that the settlement language was not clear enough to simply wipe away Giuffre’s claim against Andrew at that stage. That ruling left Andrew exposed to the very thing he seemed desperate to avoid: a drawn-out American legal fight with sworn testimony, evidence demands, and global headlines hanging over the monarchy. The case was eventually settled out of court in February 2022 without an admission of liability, but by then the damage was done—Giuffre had forced Andrew out of the palace-controlled public-relations arena and into a legal forum where denial alone was no longer enough. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

4. juli 202644 min
episode Mega Edition: Virginia Robert's Motion To Compel Documents From Improper Objections (Part 3-5) (7/4/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Virginia Robert's Motion To Compel Documents From Improper Objections (Part 3-5) (7/4/26)

In early 2016, Virginia Giuffre, through her counsel, filed a motion seeking to compel Ghislaine Maxwell to produce documents that had been withheld based on objections and privilege claims deemed improper by the plaintiff. Giuffre’s motion challenged Maxwell’s broad assertions of attorney‑client privilege, work‑product doctrine, vagueness, overbreadth, and undue burden. The motion was accompanied by detailed declarations—most notably by attorney Sigrid S. McCawley—which laid out why many of Maxwell’s objections appeared unjustified and why the requested materials were relevant and necessary for Giuffre’s case. The court reviewed both the motion and Maxwell’s opposition, which included memoranda of law and declarations defending her objections and maintaining that providing certain documents would violate privacy rights or exceed the scope of discovery. Ultimately, in a partially favorable ruling for Giuffre, the court granted the motion in part and denied it in part, indicating that while some objections were valid, Maxwell was required to produce additional documents where privilege claims were not properly supported. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Giuffre v. Maxwell | MOTION to Compel Ghislaine Maxwell to Produce Documents Subject To Improper Objections . Document | Casetext [https://casetext.com/brief/giuffre-v-maxwell_motion-to-compel-ghislaine-maxwell-to-produce-documents-subject-to-improper]

4. juli 202645 min
episode Mega Edition: Virginia Robert's Motion To Compel Documents From Improper Objections (Part 1-2) (7/4/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Virginia Robert's Motion To Compel Documents From Improper Objections (Part 1-2) (7/4/26)

In early 2016, Virginia Giuffre, through her counsel, filed a motion seeking to compel Ghislaine Maxwell to produce documents that had been withheld based on objections and privilege claims deemed improper by the plaintiff. Giuffre’s motion challenged Maxwell’s broad assertions of attorney‑client privilege, work‑product doctrine, vagueness, overbreadth, and undue burden. The motion was accompanied by detailed declarations—most notably by attorney Sigrid S. McCawley—which laid out why many of Maxwell’s objections appeared unjustified and why the requested materials were relevant and necessary for Giuffre’s case. The court reviewed both the motion and Maxwell’s opposition, which included memoranda of law and declarations defending her objections and maintaining that providing certain documents would violate privacy rights or exceed the scope of discovery. Ultimately, in a partially favorable ruling for Giuffre, the court granted the motion in part and denied it in part, indicating that while some objections were valid, Maxwell was required to produce additional documents where privilege claims were not properly supported. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Giuffre v. Maxwell | MOTION to Compel Ghislaine Maxwell to Produce Documents Subject To Improper Objections . Document | Casetext [https://casetext.com/brief/giuffre-v-maxwell_motion-to-compel-ghislaine-maxwell-to-produce-documents-subject-to-improper]

4. juli 202624 min
episode All Questions, No Answers: Ghislaine Maxwell And Her Deposition Before Congress artwork

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Today, convicted sex-trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell is scheduled to sit for a deposition before the U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform Committee as part of Congress’s ongoing investigation into the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein and his network. Lawmakers have arranged for Maxwell to appear—likely by videolink from prison—to answer questions about her role in Epstein’s operations, her connections with powerful individuals, and related matters that have come to light after the release of millions of federal documents linked to the Epstein case. Committee members, including Representative Ro Khanna, outlined specific questions they intend to ask, spanning alleged co-conspirators, unindicted individuals, and high-profile figures with ties to Epstein’s world. However, Maxwell’s legal team has made clear she intends to invoke her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and will refuse to answer substantive questions during this deposition, effectively pleading the Fifth throughout the session rather than provide testimony. According to lawmakers, Maxwell plans to read a prepared statement at the outset and then decline to respond to individual inquiries—citing her constitutional privilege and concerns about jeopardizing ongoing legal matters, including a habeas petition challenging her conviction. This strategy means Congress may not get direct answers from her today, even as it pursues broader scrutiny of Epstein’s activities and associations. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Ghislaine Maxwell is set to plead the fifth as she appears before the US Congress board investigating Jeffrey Epstein today | Daily Mail Online [https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15541775/Ghislaine-Maxwell-US-Congress-Jeffrey-Epstein.html]

4. juli 202614 min
episode The Maxwell Deposition: What Congress Wants — And What She’ll Never Say artwork

The Maxwell Deposition: What Congress Wants — And What She’ll Never Say

Ghislaine Maxwell, the convicted associate of Jeffrey Epstein who is serving a 20-year federal prison sentence, is scheduled to give a **virtual deposition before the U.S. House Oversight Committee on February 9, 2026, as part of the committee’s ongoing investigation into Epstein’s criminal network and the federal government’s handling of related cases. Committee Chairman James Comer issued a subpoena for Maxwell’s testimony, which comes amid growing pressure from lawmakers to uncover additional information about Epstein’s operations and his circle of powerful associates. Maxwell’s lawyers have indicated she may invoke her Fifth Amendment rights during the deposition rather than answer substantive questions, and she had previously resisted congressional questioning while pursuing appeals of her conviction. The deposition is being conducted in closed session, and while Maxwell already participated in an extensive interview with Department of Justice officials last year, congressional leaders see her testimony as a potentially critical piece in efforts to understand the broader Epstein network and related government responses. The context of Maxwell’s appearance is entangled with broader political and legal battles over the release of Epstein-related documents, compliance with subpoenas by other high-profile figures, and disputes between Congress and both the DOJ and the Supreme Court over access to evidence. Republicans and Democrats alike have pushed for more transparency, while some subpoenaed individuals, including former officials, have resisted testifying, triggering threats of contempt proceedings. Maxwell’s deposition thus comes at a moment of heightened scrutiny on how federal authorities handled Epstein and his network — and whether powerful individuals connected to that network will ever be compelled to speak under oath to lawmakers seeking accountability. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Ghislaine Maxwell summoned before Congress for grilling over Epstein secrets | Daily Mail Online [https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15485145/Ghislaine-Maxwell-summoned-Congress-grilling-Epstein-secrets.html]

4. juli 202611 min