The Vault: The Epstein Files

Virginia Roberts Blasts Alan Dershowitz Claims Of Exoneration

23 min · Eilen
jakson Virginia Roberts Blasts Alan Dershowitz Claims Of Exoneration kansikuva

Kuvaus

Virginia Giuffre rejected Alan Dershowitz’s claim that he had been fully exonerated after their defamation fight ended in a settlement. Dershowitz had publicly celebrated the resolution, pointing to Giuffre’s statement that she “may have made a mistake” in identifying him as one of the men Jeffrey Epstein trafficked her to. He treated that language as proof that he had been cleared. Giuffre, however, made clear that the settlement did not mean a court had vindicated him, did not mean a jury had found in his favor, and did not give him the right to declare himself officially exonerated. Giuffre’s position was that ending the lawsuit was not the same thing as proving Dershowitz’s version of events. The litigation had dragged on for years, both sides had accused the other of lying, and the settlement closed the case without a trial or a legal finding on the underlying allegation. Dershowitz has always denied Giuffre’s claims, but Giuffre pushed back against his attempt to turn the settlement into a public-relations victory. Her message was simple: the case may be over, but Dershowitz does not get to rewrite that ending as total exoneration just because he says so. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: https://www.thedailybeast.com/epstein-victim-virginia-giuffre-says-alan-dershowitz-is-not-exonerated-no-matter-what-he-says [https://www.thedailybeast.com/epstein-victim-virginia-giuffre-says-alan-dershowitz-is-not-exonerated-no-matter-what-he-says]

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity The Vault: The Epstein Files-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

997 jaksot

jakson Mega Edition: The DOJ And Their Long Running Conversation With Epstein's Lawyers (6/28/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: The DOJ And Their Long Running Conversation With Epstein's Lawyers (6/28/26)

The back-and-forth between prosecutors in the Southern District of Florida and Jeffrey Epstein’s legal team during the negotiation of the non-prosecution agreement reads less like an adversarial process and more like a prolonged, collaborative dialogue aimed at reaching terms acceptable to Epstein himself. His attorneys were not simply responding to charges—they were actively shaping the framework of the deal, pushing for concessions on scope, immunity, and exposure not just for Epstein, but for potential co-conspirators. Instead of drawing hard lines, federal prosecutors engaged in a sustained colloquy that entertained defense proposals, adjusted positions, and ultimately bent toward a resolution that prioritized closure over accountability. The result was an agreement that allowed Epstein to plead to minor state charges while securing sweeping federal immunity, effectively shutting down a far broader investigation before it could fully develop. What makes this even more damning is how the Department of Justice appeared willing—if not eager—to accommodate Epstein’s demands at nearly every turn. Rather than treating him as the central figure in a sprawling abuse network, prosecutors treated him like a negotiating partner whose preferences needed to be satisfied. Victims were sidelined, key investigative avenues were abandoned, and the final agreement was structured in a way that insulated not only Epstein but others in his orbit from federal scrutiny. This was not a failure of resources or a lack of evidence—it was a conscious decision to resolve the case on terms dictated by the defense. The DOJ’s handling of this process reflects a systemic breakdown in prosecutorial duty, where the pursuit of justice was subordinated to expediency and deference to power, leaving behind one of the most glaring examples of institutional failure in modern federal criminal practice. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00226107.pdf [https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%209/EFTA00226107.pdf]

28. kesä 20261 h 17 min
jakson Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein and His Special Relationship With The Gulf States (6/27/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein and His Special Relationship With The Gulf States (6/27/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s connections in the Gulf appear to have been broader and more deliberate than the older public narrative suggested. Newly released DOJ documents and later reporting show that Epstein was not merely name-dropping Arab royalty or chasing prestige from afar; he was trying to build a network across Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and the wider Middle East, inserting himself into conversations about Saudi investment, the Aramco IPO, the Qatar blockade, and access to ruling-family circles. CBS reported that documents show Epstein had contacts with members of the Saudi royal family and traveled to Saudi Arabia in the final years of his life, while Reuters reported that the files show Epstein attempting to cultivate powerful political and business figures across the region. That matters because Epstein’s Gulf relationships fit the same pattern seen elsewhere in his life: he sought proximity to money, state power, intelligence-adjacent figures, sovereign wealth, and elite gatekeepers, then used those associations to inflate his importance and preserve access after his 2008 conviction. The most dramatic fallout has involved Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, the Dubai ports titan and longtime DP World chief, who resigned after DOJ files and reporting exposed years of communications and scrutiny over his Epstein relationship; Reuters and The Guardian both reported that the controversy triggered pressure from major investors and forced a leadership shakeup at DP World. None of that proves every Gulf figure in Epstein’s orbit participated in his crimes, but it does show that his Middle East network was not some minor footnote. It was part of the same global access machine that allowed Epstein to keep moving through elite circles long after he should have been radioactive to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

28. kesä 202647 min
jakson Lord Conrad Black And His Defense Of Prince Andrew kansikuva

Lord Conrad Black And His Defense Of Prince Andrew

Lord Conrad Black, a controversial media magnate and convicted felon pardoned by former President Trump, entered the Prince Andrew controversy with a highly defensive stance that framed the royal as a victim of disproportionate post-Epstein scrutiny rather than someone whose conduct merited accountability. In opinion pieces, Black insisted it was “a disgrace” that Prince Andrew was isolated and stripped of honors over a civil lawsuit tied to allegations about his association with Jeffrey Epstein, arguing that the withdrawal of titles by Queen Elizabeth II was unjustified given there had been no criminal conviction or definitive finding of wrongdoing against the Duke of York. Black leaned heavily on the presumption of innocence and cast the legal and media pressure on Andrew as a kind of “frenzied assault” fueled by a sensationalist system that targets powerful men, rather than focusing on survivor testimony or the deep entanglement between Epstein’s network and elite figures. Critics of Black’s defense have argued that his position misses the core issue — not whether Andrew was criminally convicted, but whether his behavior and associations with Epstein were reckless, harmful, and deserving of vigorous scrutiny. By minimizing the severity of allegations and focusing on perceived procedural unfairness, Black’s commentary was seen by many as protective of privilege rather than supportive of truth or justice, particularly given the emerging documentary evidence showing Andrew’s ongoing contact with Epstein even after public backlash. His framing also glossed over the substantive harm experienced by survivors and the pattern of evasive responses from Andrew himself, reducing a complex reckoning over power, influence, and alleged sexual exploitation to a narrative about misplaced outrage — a stance that critics say aligns with a long tradition of elites defending elites at the expense of victims’ voices and accountability. Strictly public sources do not confirm every claim made here; Black’s commentary focused on defending reputation and criticizing the backlash, but the broader context includes documented serious allegations and responses from royal and legal authorities. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

28. kesä 202620 min
jakson Alan Dershowitz Co-Signs For Ghislaine Maxwell kansikuva

Alan Dershowitz Co-Signs For Ghislaine Maxwell

Alan Dershowitz, the high-profile defense attorney who once represented Jeffrey Epstein and helped negotiate his controversial 2008 non-prosecution agreement, has been one of the most vocal advocates for Ghislaine Maxwell in the public arena since her arrest and conviction. He has argued publicly that Maxwell could provide critical information about Epstein’s network if offered incentives such as immunity and has suggested that law enforcement should cut a deal with her in exchange for cooperation with Congress and prosecutors, framing her as a potential key witness with deep knowledge of Epstein’s operations. Dershowitz has consistently attacked media coverage and critics of Maxwell, asserting that speculation about her role in procuring underage girls for Epstein extends beyond the judicial record and venturing into dangerous, unproven territory — positions that have drawn widespread skepticism given the gravity of the crimes and the number of victims who testified at trial His defense extends beyond tactical legal suggestions to broader public messaging that downplays or questions the strength of allegations tied to Epstein’s inner circle, all while he himself has been the subject of civil allegations connected to the Epstein case that he vigorously denies. Critics say that Dershowitz’s arguments serve to protect the powerful and shift focus away from accountability for abuse, pointing out that his calls for a transactional approach to Maxwell’s testimony risk minimizing the voices of survivors and obscuring the systemic failures that enabled Epstein’s crimes. By positioning Maxwell as an “underdog” or “source of truth” primarily in terms of political utility rather than moral responsibility, Dershowitz’s public defense has become part of a broader controversy over how powerful insiders are shielded even in the wake of clear evidence and convictions. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

28. kesä 202616 min
jakson Bill Gates Denies He Has Ever Been To Little Saint James kansikuva

Bill Gates Denies He Has Ever Been To Little Saint James

Bill Gates’ representatives denied claims circulating online that he repeatedly visited Jeffrey Epstein’s private island, Little St. James. A spokesperson for Gates said the allegation was false and stated that Gates had never been to the island. The denial came after social media posts alleged Gates had traveled there dozens of times, tying him to one of the most notorious locations associated with Epstein’s sex-trafficking allegations. Gates’ team did acknowledge that Gates had met with Epstein in the past, but said those meetings were connected to philanthropy and global health discussions, not visits to Epstein’s island. The claims about repeated island trips were also challenged by available flight-log reviews, which did not show evidence that Gates traveled to Little St. James dozens of times. Gates’ connection to Epstein remained controversial because the meetings happened after Epstein’s 2008 conviction, but the specific claim denied was that Gates repeatedly visited Epstein’s island. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bill Gates didn't visit sex criminal Jeffrey Epstein's island repeatedly [https://nypost.com/2020/05/15/bill-gates-didnt-visit-sex-criminal-jeffrey-epsteins-island-repeatedly/]

28. kesä 202623 min