Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

Mega Edition: Leon Black And His Attempt To Sprint Away From The Shadow Of Epstein (6/28/26)

1 h 10 min · 28. juni 2026
episode Mega Edition: Leon Black And His Attempt To Sprint Away From The Shadow Of Epstein (6/28/26) cover

Description

Leon Black has spent years trying to put as much distance as possible between himself and Jeffrey Epstein, even though the documented financial relationship was enormous and lasted long after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Black’s public line has been that Epstein provided legitimate tax, estate, and philanthropic advice, that he did not know about Epstein’s “demonic life,” and that Epstein “duped and deceived” him. In his House Oversight testimony, Black denied involvement in Epstein’s crimes, denied paying Epstein for access to women, denied being blackmailed, and framed the relationship as a professional mistake rather than something darker. But that defense has always had a massive problem attached to it: Black paid Epstein roughly $158 million between 2012 and 2017, with Senate investigators putting the total at more than $170 million, for work Black says was bona fide financial advice. Black’s distancing campaign has included regret statements, an Apollo-commissioned outside review, stepping down from Apollo’s leadership in 2021, denying civil allegations, and settling with the U.S. Virgin Islands for $62.5 million without admitting wrongdoing. He has tried to draw a bright line between “Leon Black, client of Epstein’s financial advice” and “Jeffrey Epstein, sex trafficker,” but that line is hard to sell when Epstein was already a convicted sex offender and Black continued paying him staggering sums anyway. The story Black wants believed is that he knew the useful Epstein, not the criminal Epstein — the “Jekyll,” not the “Hyde.” The problem is that the money, timing, access, and secrecy make that separation look less like a clean break and more like a carefully managed effort to minimize what was, by any reasonable measure, one of Epstein’s most lucrative post-conviction relationships. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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episode Epstein’s Operation Wasn’t Wholesale — It Was Targeted (Part 3) (7/7/26) artwork

Epstein’s Operation Wasn’t Wholesale — It Was Targeted (Part 3) (7/7/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking operation was not built like a traditional street-level sex-trafficking ring focused on volume and direct profit. It was a targeted exploitation network designed around access, influence, leverage, and elite protection. Epstein allegedly used vulnerable girls and young women as currency inside a world of wealthy and powerful people, where secrecy and proximity mattered more than ordinary commercial gain. Jean-Luc Brunel and MC2 mattered because the modeling industry allegedly provided the perfect cover: promises of opportunity, travel, housing, introductions, and career advancement that could be used to lure young women into Epstein’s orbit while making the arrangement appear legitimate from the outside. Immigration fraud was central to that machinery because foreign girls and young women could allegedly be brought into the United States under false pretenses, then controlled through fear, dependency, paperwork, and threats tied to their legal status. Once inside the system, the promise of modeling work could turn into coercion, isolation, abuse, and silence, with immigration vulnerability functioning like an invisible leash. The larger indictment is that Epstein’s operation required more than one predator; it required recruiters, facilitators, professional covers, institutional failure, and powerful people willing to look away. Epstein may be dead, and Brunel may be dead, but the machinery they used did not run on ghosts, and until the visa fraud, modeling pipeline, money trail, and protected associates are fully exposed, the coverup remains alive. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7. juli 202613 min
episode Epstein’s Operation Wasn’t Wholesale — It Was Targeted (Part 2) (7/7/26) artwork

Epstein’s Operation Wasn’t Wholesale — It Was Targeted (Part 2) (7/7/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking operation was not built like a traditional street-level sex-trafficking ring focused on volume and direct profit. It was a targeted exploitation network designed around access, influence, leverage, and elite protection. Epstein allegedly used vulnerable girls and young women as currency inside a world of wealthy and powerful people, where secrecy and proximity mattered more than ordinary commercial gain. Jean-Luc Brunel and MC2 mattered because the modeling industry allegedly provided the perfect cover: promises of opportunity, travel, housing, introductions, and career advancement that could be used to lure young women into Epstein’s orbit while making the arrangement appear legitimate from the outside. Immigration fraud was central to that machinery because foreign girls and young women could allegedly be brought into the United States under false pretenses, then controlled through fear, dependency, paperwork, and threats tied to their legal status. Once inside the system, the promise of modeling work could turn into coercion, isolation, abuse, and silence, with immigration vulnerability functioning like an invisible leash. The larger indictment is that Epstein’s operation required more than one predator; it required recruiters, facilitators, professional covers, institutional failure, and powerful people willing to look away. Epstein may be dead, and Brunel may be dead, but the machinery they used did not run on ghosts, and until the visa fraud, modeling pipeline, money trail, and protected associates are fully exposed, the coverup remains alive. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7. juli 202611 min
episode Epstein’s Operation Wasn’t Wholesale — It Was Targeted (Part 1) (7/7/26) artwork

Epstein’s Operation Wasn’t Wholesale — It Was Targeted (Part 1) (7/7/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking operation was not built like a traditional street-level sex-trafficking ring focused on volume and direct profit. It was a targeted exploitation network designed around access, influence, leverage, and elite protection. Epstein allegedly used vulnerable girls and young women as currency inside a world of wealthy and powerful people, where secrecy and proximity mattered more than ordinary commercial gain. Jean-Luc Brunel and MC2 mattered because the modeling industry allegedly provided the perfect cover: promises of opportunity, travel, housing, introductions, and career advancement that could be used to lure young women into Epstein’s orbit while making the arrangement appear legitimate from the outside. Immigration fraud was central to that machinery because foreign girls and young women could allegedly be brought into the United States under false pretenses, then controlled through fear, dependency, paperwork, and threats tied to their legal status. Once inside the system, the promise of modeling work could turn into coercion, isolation, abuse, and silence, with immigration vulnerability functioning like an invisible leash. The larger indictment is that Epstein’s operation required more than one predator; it required recruiters, facilitators, professional covers, institutional failure, and powerful people willing to look away. Epstein may be dead, and Brunel may be dead, but the machinery they used did not run on ghosts, and until the visa fraud, modeling pipeline, money trail, and protected associates are fully exposed, the coverup remains alive. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7. juli 202615 min
episode The Royal Alibi That a Restaurant Took More Seriously Than Scotland Yard (7/7/26) artwork

The Royal Alibi That a Restaurant Took More Seriously Than Scotland Yard (7/7/26)

Pizza Express carried out an internal inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s infamous claim that he was at its Woking branch on March 10, 2001 — the same date Virginia Giuffre alleged she was sexually abused by him after being trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein. Andrew used the Woking visit during his 2019 BBC Newsnight interview as part of his denial, saying he had taken Princess Beatrice to a children’s party there and remembered it because going to Pizza Express in Woking was an unusual thing for him to do. According to the BBC’s reporting, Pizza Express checked what it could, including records and former staff, but found no evidence proving he had been there — and no evidence definitively proving he had not. BBC Newsnight also revisited the claim and found no record of anyone seeing Andrew at the restaurant that day. The BBC tried to get answers from the Metropolitan Police about whether royal protection officers had accompanied him, but the Met refused to confirm or deny whether it held relevant information, citing national security and protection issues. So the bottom line is brutal: one of Andrew’s most famous Epstein alibis remains unsupported by any clear public evidence, and the most visible attempt to test it appears to have come not from police producing a clean answer, but from Pizza Express itself trying to verify whether the former royal was ever actually in that Woking branch. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Pizza Express held inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's Woking claim [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1my27lyjx9o]

7. juli 202611 min
episode Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch Hit's The Market Before Selling For A Reduced Price (7/6/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch Hit's The Market Before Selling For A Reduced Price (7/6/26)

Zorro Ranch, Jeffrey Epstein’s sprawling New Mexico property, hit the market in 2021 after years of being tied to allegations of abuse, trafficking, secrecy, and unanswered questions. The estate first listed the ranch for $27.5 million, a huge asking price for a property carrying one of the darkest names in American criminal history. But the market did not exactly rush in. The ranch sat for roughly two years, burdened not just by its remote location and specialized compound layout, but by the stain of Epstein’s crimes and the fact that survivors had alleged abuse occurred there. Eventually, the price was cut sharply, dropping from $27.5 million to $18 million, a nearly $10 million reduction that showed just how toxic the property had become. In August 2023, Epstein’s estate confirmed that Zorro Ranch had finally sold, though the sale price was initially undisclosed. The buyer was a newly registered company, later reporting identified as tied to the family of Texas businessman and former state senator Don Huffines, and the proceeds were described as going toward administration of the estate and payment of creditors. That sale did not close the book on the ranch; if anything, it reopened questions about why the property had never received the same level of law-enforcement scrutiny as Epstein’s other locations. By 2026, New Mexico authorities had reopened their investigation and searched the former ranch, now under new ownership, underscoring that the sale may have transferred the deed, but it did not erase the shadow hanging over the property. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7. juli 202651 min