Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

Lesley Groff And The Transcript From Her Epstein Related Trip to Congress (Part 1) (7/2/26)

11 min · 2 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Lesley Groff And The Transcript From Her Epstein Related Trip to Congress (Part 1) (7/2/26)

Descripción

Lesley Groff told the House Oversight Committee that she worked for Jeffrey Epstein from February 2001 until July 2019 as his secretary/administrative assistant, handling scheduling, calls, travel coordination, calendars, and staff logistics. Her central position was that Epstein kept her separated from his criminal life, that she never witnessed abuse, never had a victim disclose abuse to her, and did not knowingly help Epstein or Maxwell commit crimes. She described Epstein as a “master manipulator” who lied to her and kept his “legitimate” world apart from his abuse, while acknowledging that she scheduled massage appointments when Epstein provided names and numbers, sometimes circulated calendars that included those appointments early on, and understood the massages as routine at the time. She said she did not personally meet the massage providers, did not know they were minors or young women, and assumed they were masseuses, even though members pressed her on why an extremely wealthy man would use rotating names and phone numbers instead of a professional massage service. The questioning also focused heavily on Epstein’s network and whether Groff had knowledge of powerful men being provided access to girls or young women through Epstein or Maxwell. Groff repeatedly answered no when asked whether she had arranged massages for prominent figures, knew of sexual activity involving minors or young women, or knew of anyone who knowingly facilitated Epstein’s crimes. She acknowledged scheduling or connecting Epstein with high-profile contacts, including Prince Andrew, Ehud Barak, Larry Summers, George Mitchell, John Kerry, Wesley Clark, Bill Clinton-related circles, and Donald Trump phone calls, but denied arranging Trump travel during her employment and denied knowledge of Trump-related law enforcement communications. She also said she never suspected Epstein or Maxwell of working with any intelligence service. Overall, Groff’s testimony was defensive and narrow: she admitted to being part of the machinery that kept Epstein’s calendar and contacts moving, but insisted she never saw the criminal operation underneath it and never knowingly enabled it. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source:   Lesley-Groff-Transcript.pdf [https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Lesley-Groff-Transcript.pdf]

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Portada del episodio No End In Sight For Congress’ Epstein Probe (7/9/26)

No End In Sight For Congress’ Epstein Probe (7/9/26)

The House Oversight Committee’s Epstein investigation is about to hit the one-year mark, and according to Politico, there is no real sign that the probe is winding down. The central point is that, even without a single clean “smoking gun,” the investigation has developed too much political gravity to simply disappear. The committee remains under pressure to keep digging into Epstein’s network, his financial and social enablers, and the powerful figures who may have had knowledge of, benefited from, or helped shield his operation. Politico frames the probe as something that will likely outlast the current Congress, because both parties now have reasons to keep the issue alive: Democrats want to press Trump and his orbit, while Republicans face pressure from their own base to keep demanding answers about the Epstein files and institutional coverups. The bigger takeaway is that Epstein has become a permanent political liability, not just an old criminal case. The Oversight investigation has already pulled in documents, testimony, estate records, DOJ fights, and public pressure from survivors, and Politico suggests that the next phase could depend heavily on who controls the House after the midterms. If Democrats take control, the probe could become even more Trump-centered; if Republicans retain control, they may still be forced to continue because the Epstein issue has become radioactive with voters who believe Washington has hidden the truth for years. Either way, the article makes clear that Epstein is not fading into the background. The machinery of Congress may be slow, performative, and often self-serving, but the political appetite around this scandal is still there — and that means the investigation is likely to keep dragging powerful names, uncomfortable records, and institutional failures back into the light. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Why the House's Epstein investigation isn't going away - POLITICO [https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/09/jeffrey-epstein-trump-house-investigation-00990996]

9 de jul de 202621 min
Portada del episodio Why the Epstein Scandal Should Haunt Todd Blanche’s AG Nomination (Part 2) (7/9/26)

Why the Epstein Scandal Should Haunt Todd Blanche’s AG Nomination (Part 2) (7/9/26)

The Epstein scandal should be disqualifying for Todd Blanche because it cuts straight to the central question of whether he can be trusted to lead the Department of Justice with independence, transparency, and moral authority. Blanche has been tied to the DOJ’s handling of the Epstein files at a time when the department has faced serious criticism over delayed releases, heavy redactions, disputed compliance with court orders, and the continued withholding of records the public has been demanding for years. That matters because the Epstein case is not just another legal controversy; it is a symbol of institutional failure, elite protection, and survivor betrayal. Any attorney general nominee connected to that same culture of secrecy should have to answer for it before being handed more power. Instead of looking like a reformer willing to rip open the files and restore public trust, Blanche looks like another custodian of the locked door. That alone should stop his nomination cold. The attorney general is supposed to be the person who proves that the law applies upward as well as downward, especially in a case as radioactive and morally loaded as Epstein’s. Blanche’s role in the file-release debacle, combined with reports that the DOJ has continued fighting disclosure in litigation, creates the appearance of a man protecting the institution instead of serving the public. In the Epstein matter, that appearance is devastating because secrecy has always been the scandal’s bloodstream. Survivors do not need another official praising transparency while documents remain buried, and the public does not need another polished lawyer explaining why accountability has to wait. Blanche should not be promoted into the job that controls the very machinery now under suspicion. He should be questioned, investigated, and forced to explain every delay, every withholding decision, and every redaction connected to the Epstein files. Until that happens, putting him in charge of the DOJ would not restore confidence; it would confirm that the culture of concealment is not being punished, but rewarded. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

9 de jul de 202611 min
Portada del episodio Why the Epstein Scandal Should Haunt Todd Blanche’s AG Nomination (Part 1) (7/9/26)

Why the Epstein Scandal Should Haunt Todd Blanche’s AG Nomination (Part 1) (7/9/26)

The Epstein scandal should be disqualifying for Todd Blanche because it cuts straight to the central question of whether he can be trusted to lead the Department of Justice with independence, transparency, and moral authority. Blanche has been tied to the DOJ’s handling of the Epstein files at a time when the department has faced serious criticism over delayed releases, heavy redactions, disputed compliance with court orders, and the continued withholding of records the public has been demanding for years. That matters because the Epstein case is not just another legal controversy; it is a symbol of institutional failure, elite protection, and survivor betrayal. Any attorney general nominee connected to that same culture of secrecy should have to answer for it before being handed more power. Instead of looking like a reformer willing to rip open the files and restore public trust, Blanche looks like another custodian of the locked door. That alone should stop his nomination cold. The attorney general is supposed to be the person who proves that the law applies upward as well as downward, especially in a case as radioactive and morally loaded as Epstein’s. Blanche’s role in the file-release debacle, combined with reports that the DOJ has continued fighting disclosure in litigation, creates the appearance of a man protecting the institution instead of serving the public. In the Epstein matter, that appearance is devastating because secrecy has always been the scandal’s bloodstream. Survivors do not need another official praising transparency while documents remain buried, and the public does not need another polished lawyer explaining why accountability has to wait. Blanche should not be promoted into the job that controls the very machinery now under suspicion. He should be questioned, investigated, and forced to explain every delay, every withholding decision, and every redaction connected to the Epstein files. Until that happens, putting him in charge of the DOJ would not restore confidence; it would confirm that the culture of concealment is not being punished, but rewarded. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

9 de jul de 202614 min
Portada del episodio Mega Edition: Sarah Kellen Vickers New Narrative Versus The Contemporaneous Record (7/8/26)

Mega Edition: Sarah Kellen Vickers New Narrative Versus The Contemporaneous Record (7/8/26)

Sarah Kellen’s new narrative is that she was not one of Jeffrey Epstein’s enablers, but one of his victims: groomed, abused, controlled, threatened, and psychologically trapped inside his world. In her 2026 House Oversight testimony and related reporting, she described Epstein as someone who sexually and psychologically abused her, manipulated her, and used his power to make her believe disobedience would cost her everything. That account matters, and it should not be dismissed automatically, because Epstein’s operation was built on coercion, dependency, manipulation, and blurred lines between victimization and participation. But the problem for Kellen is that her victimhood claim crashes directly into the record that has followed her for years: she was named as a potential co-conspirator in Epstein’s non-prosecution agreement, was repeatedly described in lawsuits and survivor accounts as a scheduler or facilitator, and has long been accused of helping arrange massages, travel, logistics, and access to girls and young women. Survivors have not merely described her as someone standing in the background; they have described her as part of the machinery that made Epstein’s abuse possible. The evidence trail has also pointed to her being inside the operational center of Epstein’s life, not outside of it: close to the calendars, close to the travel, close to the appointments, close to the day-to-day system that delivered girls into Epstein’s orbit. Kellen has never been criminally charged, and it is possible for someone to be both abused and later used to help an abuser harm others. But that does not erase the allegations against her, and it does not answer the central question survivors have been asking for years: if Kellen was close enough to know how the machine worked, why has there been so little public accountability for the people accused of keeping it running? Her new narrative may explain how Epstein controlled her, but it does not magically wipe away what survivors say she did, what the paper trail suggests she knew, or why her immunity remains one of the most bitter symbols of the Epstein deal. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

9 de jul de 202654 min
Portada del episodio Mega Edition: Nadia Marcinkova And The Blurred Line (7/8/26)

Mega Edition: Nadia Marcinkova And The Blurred Line (7/8/26)

Nadia Marcinkova, also known as Nadia Marcinko or Nada Marcinkova, fits into the Epstein story as one of the women identified as being inside Jeffrey Epstein’s inner circle rather than merely passing through it. She has been described in reporting and court-related materials as a former model, later a pilot, and a longtime Epstein associate who appeared in flight records and was connected to his private-plane operation. Her name is especially significant because she was listed in Epstein’s 2007/2008 non-prosecution arrangement as one of the “potential co-conspirators” who received protection from federal prosecution, alongside names such as Sarah Kellen, Adriana Ross, and Lesley Groff. That immunity provision became one of the ugliest parts of the sweetheart deal, because it did not just spare Epstein from serious federal consequences at the time; it also created a protective shield around people alleged to have helped keep the machine running. The controversy around Marcinkova is that she sits in that murky, disturbing space between alleged victim and alleged facilitator. Some accounts have claimed Epstein brought her to the United States when she was young and referred to her in degrading terms, while alleged victims told investigators that she participated in sexual encounters involving Epstein and recruited girls; Marcinkova has not been criminally charged. That unresolved status is exactly why her name continues to draw attention: survivors and critics see her as someone who may know far more about Epstein’s operation than has ever been publicly explained, while others point to the possibility that she herself was groomed, controlled, or exploited before becoming part of the machinery around him. Her later reinvention as an aviation figure, her low public profile, and renewed attention after document releases have only deepened the sense that her role remains one of the many unanswered questions in the Epstein scandal. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

9 de jul de 202653 min