The Vault: The Epstein Files

Bill Gates Tells Congress That Epstein Tried to Blackmail Him (6/11/26)

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jakson Bill Gates Tells Congress That Epstein Tried to Blackmail Him (6/11/26) kansikuva

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Bill Gates arrived on Capitol Hill for a closed-door, transcribed interview with the House Oversight Committee as lawmakers continued digging into Jeffrey Epstein’s network, the government’s handling of the case, and the powerful figures who remained in Epstein’s orbit after his 2008 conviction. Gates told reporters he was there to cooperate and, according to his prepared remarks and subsequent reporting, described his meetings with Epstein as a “grave error in judgment.” He maintained that he never witnessed or participated in Epstein’s criminal conduct, never visited Epstein’s island, and believed at the time that Epstein might help raise money for global health and philanthropic projects. Gates has not been accused of criminal wrongdoing, but his repeated contact with Epstein after Epstein was already a convicted sex offender has remained a major reputational problem. The most explosive part of the interview was Gates’ claim that Epstein tried to use knowledge of Gates’ marital infidelities as leverage to keep him close and pressure him into continued contact. Gates framed Epstein as manipulative and said he now regrets giving Epstein credibility by meeting with him at all, while lawmakers focused on why Epstein was able to keep attracting access to billionaires, institutions, and philanthropic circles long after his criminal history was public. The hearing placed Gates inside the broader congressional effort to map Epstein’s influence network, including who met with him, who benefited from his access, and how he used proximity to elite figures to rehabilitate himself. In plain terms, Gates tried to present himself as someone Epstein misled and tried to exploit, while Congress used the interview to examine how someone like Epstein kept buying legitimacy through powerful people. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bill Gates arrives on Capitol Hill for closed door Jeffrey Epstein interview [https://nypost.com/2026/06/10/us-news/bill-gates-arrives-on-capitol-hill-for-closed-door-jeffrey-epstein-interview/]

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jakson Mega Edition: Leon Black Attempts To Put Some Distance Between Himself And Epstein (6/11/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Leon Black Attempts To Put Some Distance Between Himself And Epstein (6/11/26)

Joseph Recarey was the Palm Beach police detective who did the real street-level investigative work when Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse first came into law enforcement view in the mid-2000s. He interviewed victims, tracked down witnesses, built timelines, collected corroborating details, and helped expose that Epstein’s conduct was not an isolated allegation but a pattern involving numerous girls. Recarey’s work helped show the scale of what was happening behind the walls of Epstein’s Palm Beach mansion, and his investigation directly challenged the softer treatment Epstein later received from higher levels of the justice system. He died in 2018, before Epstein’s second arrest, but his role remains central because he was one of the investigators who actually treated the girls like victims and treated Epstein like a predator, not some untouchable financier who deserved special handling. Michael Reiter was the Palm Beach police chief who backed the investigation and refused to let Epstein’s wealth, lawyers, and social standing bury the case quietly. Reiter pushed the matter forward when prosecutors appeared reluctant to pursue Epstein aggressively, and he later became one of the most important critics of how the case was handled by state and federal authorities. He argued that Epstein received preferential treatment and that the evidence supported a much more serious prosecution than the deal Epstein ultimately received. Together, Recarey and Reiter represent the part of the Epstein story where local police did their job, built a case, and recognized the scope of the abuse—only to watch the machinery above them narrow, soften, and ultimately protect Epstein through a sweetheart outcome that has haunted the case ever since. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

12. kesä 202650 min
jakson Mega Edition: The Palm Beach Officials Who Refused to Let The Epstein Case Die (6/12/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: The Palm Beach Officials Who Refused to Let The Epstein Case Die (6/12/26)

Joseph Recarey was the Palm Beach police detective who did the real street-level investigative work when Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse first came into law enforcement view in the mid-2000s. He interviewed victims, tracked down witnesses, built timelines, collected corroborating details, and helped expose that Epstein’s conduct was not an isolated allegation but a pattern involving numerous girls. Recarey’s work helped show the scale of what was happening behind the walls of Epstein’s Palm Beach mansion, and his investigation directly challenged the softer treatment Epstein later received from higher levels of the justice system. He died in 2018, before Epstein’s second arrest, but his role remains central because he was one of the investigators who actually treated the girls like victims and treated Epstein like a predator, not some untouchable financier who deserved special handling. Michael Reiter was the Palm Beach police chief who backed the investigation and refused to let Epstein’s wealth, lawyers, and social standing bury the case quietly. Reiter pushed the matter forward when prosecutors appeared reluctant to pursue Epstein aggressively, and he later became one of the most important critics of how the case was handled by state and federal authorities. He argued that Epstein received preferential treatment and that the evidence supported a much more serious prosecution than the deal Epstein ultimately received. Together, Recarey and Reiter represent the part of the Epstein story where local police did their job, built a case, and recognized the scope of the abuse—only to watch the machinery above them narrow, soften, and ultimately protect Epstein through a sweetheart outcome that has haunted the case ever since. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

12. kesä 20261 h 1 min
jakson Kash Patel's Transparency Claims Get Smacked With A Community Note On X kansikuva

Kash Patel's Transparency Claims Get Smacked With A Community Note On X

FBI Director Kash Patel recently claimed on X that his agency has delivered on promises of "transparency," but the post was flagged with a Community Note adding context and pushback. The note reminded viewers that many documents tied to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein remain sealed or redacted, and questioned Patel’s assertion that court orders were the main barrier to releasing full files. Critics say the claim glosses over this opacity. Patel's broader handling of the Epstein matter has drawn scrutiny from lawmakers, who pressed him on whether all relevant records have been reviewed or disclosed. In recent hearings, he declined to answer some questions — including how often former President Trump appears in the files — and defended the FBI’s disclosures by saying they had released all "legally allowed" material. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

12. kesä 202613 min