The Vault: The Epstein Files

Bill Gates Set To Appear Before The Epstein Congressional Oversight Committee (6/10/26)

13 min · 10 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Bill Gates Set To Appear Before The Epstein Congressional Oversight Committee (6/10/26)

Descripción

Bill Gates is set to sit for a closed-door interview with the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on June 10 as part of the committee’s continuing investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, the federal government’s handling of the case, and the powerful people who moved through Epstein’s orbit. Gates was asked to appear after recently released Justice Department records included photos, emails, and other material tying him to Epstein between roughly 2011 and 2014, years after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Gates has not been accused of criminal wrongdoing, and he has repeatedly said his relationship with Epstein was a serious mistake, explaining that he met with him in hopes of attracting money for global health and philanthropic work. The Gates Foundation has said there were discussions involving Epstein, but no funding ever came from him. The interview is expected to focus on why Gates continued meeting with Epstein despite Epstein’s known criminal history, what Epstein was seeking from Gates and the Gates Foundation, and whether Epstein tried to leverage access to Gates for money, influence, credibility, or protection. Gates’ association with Epstein has already had personal and reputational consequences, including renewed scrutiny after Melinda French Gates said Epstein was one of the issues that contributed to the breakdown of their marriage. The broader point is that Congress is now pulling Gates into the same unresolved web that has surrounded Epstein for years: how a convicted sex offender continued attracting billionaires, politicians, financiers, academics, and institutional players long after everyone knew who he was. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bill Gates questioned about Jeffrey Epstein by House Oversight [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/10/bill-gates-jeffrey-epstein-house-oversight-interview.html]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Vault: The Epstein Files!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

998 episodios

Portada del episodio The Pam Bondi Congressional Oversight Committee Epstein Related Transcript (Part 11) (6/10/26)

The Pam Bondi Congressional Oversight Committee Epstein Related Transcript (Part 11) (6/10/26)

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]

10 de jun de 202612 min
Portada del episodio Tova Noel Breaks Her Silence on Epstein’s Final Night And Blames Systemic Failures (6/10/26)

Tova Noel Breaks Her Silence on Epstein’s Final Night And Blames Systemic Failures (6/10/26)

Former Metropolitan Correctional Center officer Tova Noel told the House Oversight Committee that her life has been upended by years of threats, harassment, and conspiracy theories tying her to Jeffrey Epstein’s death. She denied playing any role in Epstein’s death or any cover-up, saying she has been accused of being a murderer, threatened by strangers, and followed by rumors that have damaged her health, career, and personal life. Noel acknowledged that she was one of the officers on duty the night Epstein died and that she failed to properly perform required rounds and counts, but she framed that failure as part of the broader dysfunction inside the MCC rather than evidence of a plot. She blamed understaffing, poor training, bad communication from management, and what she called the “MCC Way” for the breakdowns that occurred that night. Noel also rejected specific suspicions that have followed her, including claims that she was the orange-colored figure seen on surveillance near Epstein’s cell or that she had anything to do with a mysterious payment connected to access to Epstein. She said she did not return to Epstein’s tier that night, did not carry or distribute anything orange in the Special Housing Unit, and had no knowledge of who the figure was. Her testimony still leaves the larger questions around Epstein’s death alive because she admitted the basic institutional failures: Epstein was not checked as required, records were falsified, and the jail’s security practices broke down around one of the most high-profile detainees in federal custody. In other words, Noel’s testimony was an attempt to separate incompetence and institutional rot from murder or conspiracy, while critics continue to point to the same gaps—failed cameras, missed rounds, falsified logs, and unexplained footage—as the reason the official story has never satisfied the public. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10 de jun de 202616 min
Portada del episodio Bill Gates Set To Appear Before The Epstein Congressional Oversight Committee (6/10/26)

Bill Gates Set To Appear Before The Epstein Congressional Oversight Committee (6/10/26)

Bill Gates is set to sit for a closed-door interview with the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on June 10 as part of the committee’s continuing investigation into Jeffrey Epstein, the federal government’s handling of the case, and the powerful people who moved through Epstein’s orbit. Gates was asked to appear after recently released Justice Department records included photos, emails, and other material tying him to Epstein between roughly 2011 and 2014, years after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Gates has not been accused of criminal wrongdoing, and he has repeatedly said his relationship with Epstein was a serious mistake, explaining that he met with him in hopes of attracting money for global health and philanthropic work. The Gates Foundation has said there were discussions involving Epstein, but no funding ever came from him. The interview is expected to focus on why Gates continued meeting with Epstein despite Epstein’s known criminal history, what Epstein was seeking from Gates and the Gates Foundation, and whether Epstein tried to leverage access to Gates for money, influence, credibility, or protection. Gates’ association with Epstein has already had personal and reputational consequences, including renewed scrutiny after Melinda French Gates said Epstein was one of the issues that contributed to the breakdown of their marriage. The broader point is that Congress is now pulling Gates into the same unresolved web that has surrounded Epstein for years: how a convicted sex offender continued attracting billionaires, politicians, financiers, academics, and institutional players long after everyone knew who he was. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bill Gates questioned about Jeffrey Epstein by House Oversight [https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/10/bill-gates-jeffrey-epstein-house-oversight-interview.html]

10 de jun de 202613 min
Portada del episodio Epstein Files Push Britain Into Institutional Crisis (6/10/26)

Epstein Files Push Britain Into Institutional Crisis (6/10/26)

The Epstein files are being framed as more than another royal scandal in Britain; they are being presented as a full institutional crisis hitting the monarchy, Parliament, and the Metropolitan Police all at once. The reporting argues that the newly released U.S. Justice Department documents have accelerated a collapse in public trust, with polling showing support for the monarchy falling below majority levels and approval ratings for senior royals dropping sharply. The deepest royal damage centers on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, who was reportedly arrested in February 2026 on suspicion of misconduct in public office over questions about whether he forwarded classified government reports to Epstein while serving as a trade envoy. No charges have been brought, but the arrest and open investigation have turned Epstein from a reputational stain on the royal family into a live legal and constitutional problem. The political and policing fallout is described as just as severe. Keir Starmer’s government is portrayed as being badly damaged by the Peter Mandelson connection, after Mandelson’s Epstein relationship and later document releases reportedly helped fuel a Labour revolt, cabinet resignation pressure, and growing questions about Starmer’s judgment. At the same time, the Metropolitan Police is under scrutiny over allegations that officers had proximity to Epstein-linked social circles, that Epstein-connected flights entered and left Britain without meaningful scrutiny, and that a London property tied to Epstein was not pursued more aggressively despite concerns about young women being housed there under coercive conditions. The broader point is that Britain is not dealing with one isolated Epstein-related embarrassment, but a convergence of failures across the Crown, the government, and law enforcement — the very institutions that were supposed to prevent this kind of power-protected abuse from festering in the first place. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Epstein Files Are Tearing Britain's Institutions Apart [https://easternherald.com/2026/06/08/epstein-files-britain-institutional-crisis-monarchy-parliament-police/]

10 de jun de 202613 min
Portada del episodio Mega Edition: How Pam Bondi Has Compounded The Epstein Problem (6/10/26)

Mega Edition: How Pam Bondi Has Compounded The Epstein Problem (6/10/26)

Pam Bondi has made the Epstein problem worse because she turned what should have been a sober, victim-centered document process into a rolling credibility disaster. She helped raise expectations with public talk about Epstein material being ready for release, including the now-infamous “client list” confusion, only for the DOJ to later walk that back and say no such list existed. The first “phase” of files was hyped as transparency but largely consisted of previously known or leaked material, and the rollout became a political spectacle involving binders, influencers, and media theater instead of a disciplined legal accounting. That alone damaged trust, because people who already believed the government was hiding something were handed a perfect example of sloppy messaging, overpromising, and underdelivering. Her handling of herself since then has been just as damaging. When pressed by Congress, Bondi defended the DOJ’s overall handling while distancing herself from the details, saying Todd Blanche led the Epstein-file release and that she had delegated the process to him. She admitted redaction mistakes but tried to frame the broader effort as transparent, even as reporting has shown that DOJ errors exposed sensitive victim information and intensified harassment against survivors. That is the core failure: instead of restoring confidence, Bondi’s posture has looked like a mix of blame-shifting, legal dodging, and political self-preservation. In a case where the government’s credibility was already hanging by a thread, she managed to make the public question not only what was being withheld, but whether the people in charge even understood the gravity of what they were handling. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10 de jun de 202643 min