The Vault: The Epstein Files

Mega Edition: MCC Captain's Statement Detailing The Death Of Jeffrey Epstein (Part 11-13) (6/9/26)

41 min · 10 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Mega Edition: MCC Captain's Statement Detailing The Death Of Jeffrey Epstein (Part 11-13) (6/9/26)

Descripción

This deposition comes from an unnamed captain at the Metropolitan Correctional Center and provides a detailed account of how Jeffrey Epstein was managed inside the facility, particularly in the Special Housing Unit. The captain describes Epstein’s status following his prior suicide incident, including the decision-making process around his housing, monitoring level, and classification. The testimony highlights that Epstein had previously been placed under suicide watch but was later removed from those heightened precautions, despite ongoing concerns about his mental state. It also addresses Epstein’s resistance to having a cellmate and the facility’s shifting responses to that issue, revealing a pattern where known risks were acknowledged but not consistently acted upon. The deposition also exposes broader operational failures within MCC, particularly regarding supervision, communication, and adherence to protocol. The captain’s account suggests that while staff were aware of Epstein’s vulnerability, the systems in place failed to ensure continuous and effective monitoring. Decisions around staffing, inmate placement, and observation procedures appear fragmented, with lapses that ultimately left Epstein in a position that contradicted earlier risk assessments. The testimony reinforces the larger picture of institutional breakdown, where responsibility was diffused across personnel and safeguards that should have been firmly in place were instead inconsistently applied. What makes this account difficult to accept at face value is how neatly it shifts the burden onto procedural gray areas rather than confronting the glaring contradictions in custody decisions. The captain’s testimony acknowledges that Epstein was a known suicide risk, had already experienced a prior incident, and required heightened oversight, yet still attempts to frame the subsequent downgrade in monitoring as routine or justified. That explanation strains credibility when measured against the totality of circumstances, particularly the repeated deviations from established suicide prevention protocols and the failure to enforce basic safeguards like consistent observation and appropriate cell assignments. Instead of clarifying responsibility, the deposition reads more like an exercise in institutional self-preservation—where systemic failures are reframed as isolated judgment calls, and accountability is diluted across layers of bureaucracy. In that context, the official narrative begins to look less like a coherent explanation and more like a patchwork defense designed to explain away decisions that, taken together, point to a breakdown that should never have occurred in a high-security federal facility. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00059973.pdf [https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%209/EFTA00059973.pdf]

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episode Wall Street Journal Moves to Dismiss Trump’s Epstein Letter Lawsuit (6/12/26) artwork

Wall Street Journal Moves to Dismiss Trump’s Epstein Letter Lawsuit (6/12/26)

The Wall Street Journal asked a federal judge to dismiss Donald Trump’s revised defamation lawsuit over its reporting on a sexually suggestive birthday letter allegedly sent to Jeffrey Epstein. Trump sued Dow Jones, News Corp, Rupert Murdoch, and others after the Journal reported that a 2003 birthday album compiled for Epstein included a letter bearing Trump’s name. Trump denies writing it and claims the story was false and defamatory, but a federal judge already dismissed the earlier version of the lawsuit because Trump failed to plausibly show actual malice, the demanding legal standard public figures must meet in defamation cases. Trump then filed an amended complaint, arguing in part that Murdoch had told him he would “handle” the matter before publication, but the Journal says the revised lawsuit still does not fix the legal defects. The Journal’s dismissal motion argues that Trump’s new complaint mostly repackages claims the court already rejected and still fails to show that the outlet knowingly published false information or acted with reckless disregard for the truth. The Journal says it accurately reported the existence of the letter, included Trump’s denial, and conducted reporting steps before publication, including seeking comment. It also asks the court to dismiss the case with prejudice and seeks legal fees under Florida’s anti-SLAPP law, casting the lawsuit as an attempt to punish or intimidate protected journalism. In plain terms, Trump is trying to keep the Epstein-letter defamation case alive after an earlier defeat, while the Journal is telling the court that the amended lawsuit is still legally empty and should now be thrown out for good. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Wall Street Journal Asks Judge To Toss Trump's Revised Lawsuit [https://deadline.com/2026/06/trump-wall-street-journal-lawsuit-dismiss-motion-1236953153/]

12 de jun de 202610 min
episode Lesley Groff Tells Congress Epstein "Kept Her in the Dark." (6/12/26) artwork

Lesley Groff Tells Congress Epstein "Kept Her in the Dark." (6/12/26)

Lesley Groff told Congress that Jeffrey Epstein was a “monster” and a “master manipulator,” but insisted she did not know he was running a sex-trafficking operation while she worked as his longtime executive secretary. In her closed-door interview with the House Oversight Committee, Groff said she believes Epstein’s victims, but argued that Epstein hid his crimes from her because he had every reason to keep her in the dark and no leverage over her that would have made her stay silent. She maintained that if she had known girls and young women were being abused through the massage appointments and travel logistics she helped arrange, she would not have ignored it. Groff also said she has faced harassment and death threats since Epstein’s 2019 arrest, presenting herself as someone who has been publicly blamed for crimes she claims she neither knew about nor participated in. The problem for Groff is that her denial sits against the scale of her role in Epstein’s daily operation. She worked for him for more than 18 years, was described by Epstein as an “extension of my brain,” scheduled his meetings, booked his frequent massages, arranged travel for women connected to him, and was listed as a potential co-conspirator in the 2007 non-prosecution agreement. Federal prosecutors previously said numerous victims identified her as responsible for scheduling massages during which they were abused, and survivor Marina Lacerda has described Groff as a conduit to Epstein, saying anything involving Epstein had to go through her. Groff’s testimony, then, amounted to a direct attempt to separate administrative involvement from criminal knowledge: she admitted she helped run the machinery around Epstein, but denied knowing what that machinery was being used for. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Longtime Epstein assistant paints late sex offender as master manipulator and denies knowing about his crimes | CNN Politics [https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/09/politics/epstein-assistant-lesley-groff-house-oversight]

12 de jun de 202611 min
episode Mega Edition: How Academia Not Only Welcomed Epstein But Protected Him (6/12/26) artwork

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12 de jun de 202658 min
episode Mega Edition: Leon Black Attempts To Put Some Distance Between Himself And Epstein (6/11/26) artwork

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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 de jun de 202650 min
episode Mega Edition: The Palm Beach Officials Who Refused to Let The Epstein Case Die (6/12/26) artwork

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 de jun de 20261 h 1 min