Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

The Kohberger Playbook: Is Tyler Robinson Following the Same Path? (Part 2) (7/14/26)

15 min · 14. juli 2026
episode The Kohberger Playbook: Is Tyler Robinson Following the Same Path? (Part 2) (7/14/26) cover

Description

The Tyler Robinson defense is following a familiar capital-case strategy: challenge the evidence, contest deadlines, file repeated motions, preserve every possible appellate issue, and force the prosecution to defend each stage of its case. That approach closely resembles the strategy used by Bryan Kohberger’s attorneys before he ultimately pleaded guilty in exchange for the removal of the death penalty. Although the constant delays and procedural battles are understandably frustrating, particularly for Charlie Kirk’s family and supporters, they are part of the reality of a case in which the government is seeking the ultimate punishment. The Robinson case is unlikely to move quickly or in a straight line. His attorneys are attempting to weaken the prosecution’s evidence, protect his constitutional rights, create leverage for a possible resolution, and save him from execution. Meanwhile, prosecutors must answer each challenge carefully because a major mistake could jeopardize a conviction or sentence years later. Eventually the motions and delays will end, but until then, the slow and repetitive legal grind should not be viewed as separate from the case. In a capital murder prosecution, that grind is the case. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles 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 Denise George Is Fired As AG In The USVI Amidst The Epstein Investigation artwork

Denise George Is Fired As AG In The USVI Amidst The Epstein Investigation

Denise George was removed as attorney general of the U.S. Virgin Islands at the end of December 2022, only days after she filed a sweeping federal lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase over the bank’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. George alleged that JPMorgan knowingly benefited from Epstein’s business, ignored repeated warning signs and provided financial services that helped sustain his sex-trafficking enterprise. Her firing was especially striking because she had spent years pursuing Epstein’s estate and associates, securing a settlement worth more than $105 million shortly before filing the JPMorgan case. Governor Albert Bryan Jr. announced that he had relieved George of her duties but initially offered no detailed public explanation for the decision. Reports indicated that Bryan had been frustrated because George filed the JPMorgan lawsuit without first consulting or informing him, and the governor’s office denied that her removal was solely connected to the case. Still, the timing immediately fueled suspicion that George had been fired because her investigation was beginning to expose the relationship between Epstein, one of the world’s largest banks and influential figures within the Virgin Islands. The lawsuit continued after her dismissal and ultimately produced a $75 million settlement with JPMorgan in 2023, but George was no longer in office to lead the case she initiated. Her sudden removal remains one of the most controversial episodes in the USVI’s handling of Epstein, because the official explanation never fully dispelled concerns that political pressure and institutional self-protection played a role. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Yesterday13 min
episode Ghislaine Maxwell And The Mysterious Money Movements artwork

Ghislaine Maxwell And The Mysterious Money Movements

Federal authorities examining Ghislaine Maxwell’s finances focused on a series of unusually large transactions between her and Jeffrey Epstein, including more than $20 million transferred from Epstein-controlled accounts to Maxwell between 2007 and 2011. Prosecutors said Maxwell later transferred more than $15 million back to Epstein, leaving unanswered questions about the purpose of the money and the true nature of their financial relationship. Although Maxwell was often described as independently wealthy, her precise sources of income were difficult to identify, and her lifestyle included expensive homes, extensive travel and access to elite social circles despite few publicly documented business activities. The financial mystery became more important after Maxwell was arrested in New Hampshire in July 2020 on charges that she helped Epstein recruit, groom and abuse underage girls. Authorities alleged that she had taken significant steps to conceal her location and financial resources, including purchasing the secluded New Hampshire property through a limited-liability company and using intermediaries during the transaction. Prosecutors viewed the opaque transfers, shell companies and unclear ownership arrangements as evidence that Maxwell had the money and connections necessary to flee, while her attorneys maintained that the transactions had legitimate explanations and that she was not hiding from law enforcement. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Yesterday17 min
episode Tyler Robinson and the Cost of a Capital Trial (7/17/26) artwork

Tyler Robinson and the Cost of a Capital Trial (7/17/26)

Utah taxpayers could ultimately spend more than $10 million defending Tyler Robinson, the man accused of murdering Charlie Kirk, because prosecutors are seeking the death penalty and Robinson has been declared unable to pay for his own representation. Utah County initially approved $1 million to cover expenses for both the prosecution and Robinson’s specialized defense team, while officials later indicated that another $1 million in state funding would be required. Legal experts say the final cost could rise dramatically because capital cases require experienced death-penalty attorneys, extensive expert testimony, separate guilt and sentencing phases, and potentially years of appeals if Robinson is convicted. Robinson’s attorneys have filed numerous motions challenging prosecutors, seeking limits on courtroom cameras and pressing other procedural issues that have slowed the case. Former prosecutor Neama Rahmani said the strategy appears designed to increase pressure on the state to offer Robinson a plea agreement carrying life in prison without parole, similar to the resolution reached in the Bryan Kohberger case. Utah defense attorney Nathan Evershed said delays are common in capital litigation because the passage of time can create an opportunity for negotiations once emotions surrounding the crime are less intense. Judge Tony Graf has also proceeded cautiously, and Robinson still does not have a trial date as the court considers whether prosecutors presented sufficient evidence during the preliminary hearing to move the case forward. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Taxpayers could end up shelling out more than $10M for lawyers to defend accused Charlie Kirk killer Tyler Robinson [https://nypost.com/2026/07/14/us-news/taxpayers-could-end-up-shelling-out-more-than-10m-for-lawyers-to-defend-accused-charler-kirk-killer-tyler-robinson/]

Yesterday14 min
episode Election Fraud Claims and the Epstein Contradiction (Part 2) (7/17/26) artwork

Election Fraud Claims and the Epstein Contradiction (Part 2) (7/17/26)

Trump’s election-integrity speech exposed a glaring double standard in how his administration treats government records. When FBI, CIA, or intelligence-community files appear to support his claims about election fraud, he presents them as authoritative proof of a hidden conspiracy and demands that the public trust their contents. Yet when the Epstein record raises uncomfortable questions about powerful people, institutional failures, and years of documented evidence, the administration suddenly emphasizes uncertainty, context, and the danger of drawing conclusions. The same agencies are treated as credible when their files help Trump and corrupt or unreliable when their records threaten his political interests. That is not principled skepticism or transparency. It is selective belief designed to protect the administration and weaponize government information against its enemies. The hypocrisy is especially offensive because the Epstein case rests on far more than rumors, including survivor testimony, court records, criminal convictions, financial evidence, investigative files, and decades of documented institutional misconduct. Trump cannot claim that buried intelligence files deserve national attention while dismissing demands to fully examine another archive assembled by many of the same institutions. Either government secrecy deserves scrutiny and evidence should be followed wherever it leads, or those standards mean nothing. By promoting election files while minimizing Epstein records, the administration has shown that it does not care about truth as a consistent principle. It cares about information only when that information benefits Trump, and its silence and evasiveness on Epstein reveal the emptiness of every speech it gives about transparency, accountability, and exposing corruption. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Yesterday13 min
episode Election Fraud Claims and the Epstein Contradiction (Part 1) (7/17/26) artwork

Election Fraud Claims and the Epstein Contradiction (Part 1) (7/17/26)

Trump’s election-integrity speech exposed a glaring double standard in how his administration treats government records. When FBI, CIA, or intelligence-community files appear to support his claims about election fraud, he presents them as authoritative proof of a hidden conspiracy and demands that the public trust their contents. Yet when the Epstein record raises uncomfortable questions about powerful people, institutional failures, and years of documented evidence, the administration suddenly emphasizes uncertainty, context, and the danger of drawing conclusions. The same agencies are treated as credible when their files help Trump and corrupt or unreliable when their records threaten his political interests. That is not principled skepticism or transparency. It is selective belief designed to protect the administration and weaponize government information against its enemies. The hypocrisy is especially offensive because the Epstein case rests on far more than rumors, including survivor testimony, court records, criminal convictions, financial evidence, investigative files, and decades of documented institutional misconduct. Trump cannot claim that buried intelligence files deserve national attention while dismissing demands to fully examine another archive assembled by many of the same institutions. Either government secrecy deserves scrutiny and evidence should be followed wherever it leads, or those standards mean nothing. By promoting election files while minimizing Epstein records, the administration has shown that it does not care about truth as a consistent principle. It cares about information only when that information benefits Trump, and its silence and evasiveness on Epstein reveal the emptiness of every speech it gives about transparency, accountability, and exposing corruption. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Yesterday13 min