The Vault: The Epstein Files

Mega Edition: Alex Acosta and His Fierce Defense Of The Abomination Known As The NPA (7/10/26)

48 min · 10. heinä 2026
jakson Mega Edition: Alex Acosta and His Fierce Defense Of The Abomination Known As The NPA (7/10/26) kansikuva

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Alex Acosta’s role in the Epstein negotiations has always looked less like the story of a rogue prosecutor freelancing a sweetheart deal and more like the story of a disciplined DOJ operator who understood the temperature in the room and acted accordingly. As U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Acosta was the public face attached to the 2008 non-prosecution agreement, but the negotiations unfolded inside a much larger federal machine, with pressure, involvement, and awareness reaching beyond his office. Epstein’s legal team was stacked with former prosecutors, political insiders, and high-powered attorneys who knew exactly how to work the system, and Acosta did not respond like a prosecutor ready to burn the house down in pursuit of accountability. He responded like a company man: cautious, deferential, protective of institutional interests, and willing to accept a resolution that kept the matter contained rather than force a public reckoning. That is what makes Acosta’s place in the Epstein story so important. He did not simply fail in a vacuum; he helped translate elite pressure into an official government outcome. The deal protected Epstein from a broader federal prosecution, kept victims in the dark, and allowed the DOJ to bury a case that should have exploded into national scandal years earlier. Acosta later suggested there were forces above his pay grade involved, but that only sharpened the picture: if he knew the case was bigger than him, then his job should have been to fight harder, not fold cleaner. Instead, he played the role institutions reward most often — the man who does not make trouble, does not embarrass powerful people, and does not force the Department to confront what it clearly did not want exposed. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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jakson No End In Sight For Congress’ Epstein Probe (7/10/26) kansikuva

No End In Sight For Congress’ Epstein Probe (7/10/26)

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]

10. heinä 202621 min
jakson Epstein Survivors Say That Lesley Groff Wasn't Honest With Congress (7/10/26) kansikuva

Epstein Survivors Say That Lesley Groff Wasn't Honest With Congress (7/10/26)

Epstein survivors have publicly challenged Lesley Groff's testimony before Congress, arguing that her portrayal of herself as someone who knew nothing about Epstein's abuse operation is fundamentally incompatible with their experiences. During her June 2026 testimony, Groff described Epstein as a "master manipulator" who kept his criminal conduct hidden from her and insisted that she never knowingly scheduled appointments for minors or witnessed abuse. But several survivors told CNN and other outlets that Groff was far more deeply involved than she admitted, alleging that she arranged logistics, handled payments, possessed identifying documents that would have revealed victims' ages, and was present during key moments in Epstein's operation. For the survivors, the issue is not simply whether Groff knew every detail of Epstein's crimes; it is that they believe her testimony minimizes her role and rewrites history. Some of the women have said they directly interacted with Groff, received money from her, or provided her with personal information, making her claims of ignorance difficult for them to accept. Their criticism has been echoed by some lawmakers, who openly questioned the plausibility that someone who spent nearly two decades as Epstein's executive assistant, scheduling his daily activities and coordinating travel and "massages," remained entirely unaware of what was happening around her. Groff and her attorney continue to stand by her testimony, but for many survivors, her appearance before Congress was another example of an Epstein insider distancing herself from the operation rather than fully accounting for what she saw and did during those years. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10. heinä 202616 min
jakson Mega Edition: Alex Acosta and His Fierce Defense Of The Abomination Known As The NPA (7/10/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Alex Acosta and His Fierce Defense Of The Abomination Known As The NPA (7/10/26)

Alex Acosta’s role in the Epstein negotiations has always looked less like the story of a rogue prosecutor freelancing a sweetheart deal and more like the story of a disciplined DOJ operator who understood the temperature in the room and acted accordingly. As U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Acosta was the public face attached to the 2008 non-prosecution agreement, but the negotiations unfolded inside a much larger federal machine, with pressure, involvement, and awareness reaching beyond his office. Epstein’s legal team was stacked with former prosecutors, political insiders, and high-powered attorneys who knew exactly how to work the system, and Acosta did not respond like a prosecutor ready to burn the house down in pursuit of accountability. He responded like a company man: cautious, deferential, protective of institutional interests, and willing to accept a resolution that kept the matter contained rather than force a public reckoning. That is what makes Acosta’s place in the Epstein story so important. He did not simply fail in a vacuum; he helped translate elite pressure into an official government outcome. The deal protected Epstein from a broader federal prosecution, kept victims in the dark, and allowed the DOJ to bury a case that should have exploded into national scandal years earlier. Acosta later suggested there were forces above his pay grade involved, but that only sharpened the picture: if he knew the case was bigger than him, then his job should have been to fight harder, not fold cleaner. Instead, he played the role institutions reward most often — the man who does not make trouble, does not embarrass powerful people, and does not force the Department to confront what it clearly did not want exposed. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10. heinä 202648 min
jakson Mega Edition: Alex Acosta, The 2011 Statement About Epstein And The Missing Emails (7/10/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Alex Acosta, The 2011 Statement About Epstein And The Missing Emails (7/10/26)

The missing Acosta emails refer to a nearly year-long gap in the inbox of Alexander Acosta, then the U.S. Attorney in Miami, during the most critical stretch of the Jeffrey Epstein negotiations. According to reporting on a court filing by attorneys for Epstein survivor Courtney Wild, the DOJ had not turned over significant documents tied to the 2007 non-prosecution agreement and had not clearly disclosed that Acosta’s inbox had a “data gap.” That gap reportedly ran from May 2007, when a draft federal indictment had been prepared, to April 2008, just before Epstein’s state plea effectively ended the federal case. That timing matters because it overlapped with Epstein’s legal team aggressively lobbying Acosta’s office and senior DOJ officials to avoid a federal indictment and secure the state-based resolution instead. The DOJ’s Office of Professional Responsibility said the gap did not affect Acosta’s sent mail, found no evidence of intentional deletion, and attributed it most likely to a technological error. But that explanation has never erased the larger problem: the missing inbox material landed exactly where the historical record needed to be strongest. OPR later concluded that Acosta exercised “poor judgment” in resolving the case through the NPA and failing to ensure victims were properly notified, but the missing emails left survivors’ attorneys arguing that the government’s record was incomplete at the very moment the most consequential decisions were being made. In plain terms, the emails matter because they could have shown what Acosta was receiving, who was influencing him, what pressure was being applied, and how much of the Epstein deal was driven by internal DOJ judgment versus external lobbying by Epstein’s powerful defense machine. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10. heinä 202646 min
jakson Mega Edition: Prince Andrew And The Relationship That Cost Him Everything (7/9/26) kansikuva

Mega Edition: Prince Andrew And The Relationship That Cost Him Everything (7/9/26)

Prince Andrew’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein ended up becoming the defining scandal of his life because it did not stay buried in the past — it kept resurfacing, each time with more damage attached. His friendship with Epstein, his association with Ghislaine Maxwell, the infamous New York visit after Epstein’s 2008 conviction, the photograph with Virginia Giuffre, and his catastrophic BBC Newsnight interview all combined to destroy the public image he had spent decades living behind. What began as an elite social connection turned into a permanent stain on the monarchy, because Andrew could never offer an explanation that sounded believable, moral, or even remotely aware of the seriousness of the allegations around him. Instead of looking like a prince caught in the orbit of a predator, he looked like a man who expected rank, money, and royal insulation to carry him through the wreckage. The cost was enormous. Andrew lost his public duties, military patronages, royal patronages, official role, credibility, and much of the protective distance the palace had once provided. His settlement with Virginia Giuffre kept him out of a civil trial, but it also hardened the public perception that he had paid to escape a reckoning rather than cleared his name. From that point forward, he became less a working royal than a liability management problem for King Charles and the institution itself. Epstein did not just cost Andrew reputation; he cost him purpose, status, access, and the illusion that royal blood could make consequences disappear. to contact me: bobbycappucci@protonmail.com

10. heinä 202647 min