The Vault: The Epstein Files

Trump Refiles the $10 Billion Epstein Lawsuit Against the Wall Street Journal (5/29/26)

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Portada del episodio Trump Refiles the $10 Billion Epstein Lawsuit Against the Wall Street Journal (5/29/26)

Descripción

Donald Trump has refiled a $10 billion defamation lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal over its reporting on his alleged ties to Jeffrey Epstein, specifically an article describing a birthday card to Epstein as bearing Trump’s signature. The new filing came after a federal judge threw out Trump’s earlier complaint in April, ruling that it failed to meet the “actual malice” standard required in defamation cases involving public figures. Trump’s lawyers argue that the paper either recklessly disregarded the truth or deliberately avoided discovering it, while Trump maintains the card is fake, even after lawmakers investigating Epstein released it publicly. The lawsuit names Rupert Murdoch, Dow Jones, News Corp, CEO Robert Thomson, and two Wall Street Journal reporters as defendants, claiming the reporting caused Trump major reputational and financial harm. Dow Jones has defended the reporting and said it will fight the case. The broader significance is that the lawsuit sits inside a larger pattern of Trump using defamation actions against media organizations while the Epstein issue continues to haunt his political orbit. It also keeps the Epstein connection alive in court rather than burying it, because every filing, defense response, discovery fight, and judicial ruling has the potential to drag the underlying questions about Trump, Epstein, the card, and the paper trail back into public view. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Trump refiles $10bn lawsuit against WSJ over report on alleged Epstein ties | Donald Trump | The Guardian [https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/may/28/trump-refiles-10bn-lawsuit-against-wsj-over-report-on-alleged-epstein-ties]

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episode Closed Doors, Redacted Files, and the Bondi Testimony (5/30/26) artwork

Closed Doors, Redacted Files, and the Bondi Testimony (5/30/26)

Pam Bondi’s closed-door congressional testimony over the Epstein files centered on the same problem that has haunted the entire release process: the Justice Department promised transparency, then delivered a document dump riddled with redactions, omissions, privacy violations, and unanswered questions. According to the reporting, Bondi defended the DOJ’s handling of the files while acknowledging that there were “redaction errors,” including material that critics say should never have been exposed because it risked identifying victims. She also tried to distance herself from the day-to-day review by saying she delegated much of the process to then-Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, while still insisting the department acted lawfully and responsibly. Democrats came out of the session accusing her of stonewalling, especially when questions turned to Donald Trump, his name appearing in Epstein-related material, and whether the White House influenced what the public did or did not get to see. The testimony also highlighted how much of the Epstein files fight has become a battle over controlled disclosure rather than real accountability. Bondi reportedly refused to answer multiple questions involving Trump, while lawmakers argued that millions of pages still had not been released and that the DOJ’s process protected powerful names while failing survivors. Republicans, including House Oversight Chair James Comer, framed the interview as part of a broader effort to figure out why documents remain withheld, while Democrats said Bondi’s answers only deepened suspicions that the release was managed to limit political damage. Bondi also said Ghislaine Maxwell should remain in prison for life and should not receive a pardon, but that hard line did little to settle the larger issue: the public still does not know who made the critical redaction decisions, why the files were handled so sloppily, and whether the government is releasing the truth or just carefully rationing pieces of it. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bondi shifts responsibility for Epstein files’ release to Todd Blanche, making him Democrats’ next target - POLITICO [https://www.politico.com/news/2026/05/29/pam-bondi-epstein-files-congress-testimony-00942272]

30 de may de 202616 min
episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein's Survivors And Their Long Battle For The Accountability (5/30/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein's Survivors And Their Long Battle For The Accountability (5/30/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s survivors have been pursuing justice for decades because the system failed them at almost every major point where it was supposed to act. Many of the earliest allegations against Epstein surfaced in the mid-2000s in Palm Beach, where police identified a pattern involving underage girls being recruited, paid, and brought to Epstein’s mansion, yet the federal non-prosecution agreement that followed in 2007–2008 allowed Epstein to avoid the kind of full federal prosecution that could have exposed the larger network much earlier. That deal did not just spare Epstein from meaningful accountability; it also left survivors blindsided, minimized, and treated as obstacles instead of crime victims with rights. For years afterward, they had to fight through civil suits, public smearing, sealed records, institutional silence, and the protection Epstein received from wealth, lawyers, social connections, and powerful friends. Their pursuit of justice became less like a case and more like a long war against a machine built to delay, contain, and bury what happened. Even after Epstein’s 2019 arrest and death, the survivors’ fight did not end, because death removed the central defendant but not the questions, the enablers, the institutions, or the damage. They continued pressing through the Crime Victims’ Rights Act litigation, civil claims against Epstein’s estate, lawsuits and settlements involving banks and institutions accused of enabling him, testimony before Congress, demands for document releases, and ongoing calls for accountability for those who allegedly helped him operate. Ghislaine Maxwell’s conviction was one major courtroom victory, but it did not answer the larger question survivors have been asking since the beginning: how did Epstein keep getting protected, funded, housed, introduced, excused, and rehabilitated after so many warnings? That is why their pursuit of justice has lasted so long. They are not simply asking for one conviction or one settlement; they are demanding a full accounting of the ecosystem that allowed Epstein to abuse girls, escape real punishment, and remain insulated for decades. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

30 de may de 202649 min
episode Mega Edition: Ian Maxwell Had Some Very Interesting Comments About Epstein's Death (5/30/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Ian Maxwell Had Some Very Interesting Comments About Epstein's Death (5/30/26)

Ian Maxwell’s BBC interview was controversial because it gave Ghislaine Maxwell’s brother a national platform immediately after her conviction to argue that she remained innocent, that the case against her was flawed, and that her defense had been crippled by the conditions of her confinement before trial. He portrayed the appeal as centered on claims that she had been unable to properly prepare, while also echoing defense arguments that challenged the credibility and motives of the women who testified. The backlash was predictable: Ghislaine had just been convicted of recruiting and grooming teenage girls for Jeffrey Epstein to abuse, and many critics saw the interview as yet another example of the Maxwell family trying to reframe a trafficking conviction as a story about unfair treatment rather than about the victims and the evidence. On Epstein’s death, Ian Maxwell has been tied to the broader Maxwell-family skepticism around the official suicide finding, saying or suggesting that Ghislaine herself did not believe Epstein killed himself. That view later lined up with Ghislaine Maxwell’s own statements in released Justice Department interviews, where she said she did not believe Epstein died by suicide but also rejected the more sweeping theory that powerful outsiders had him killed to protect blackmail secrets. Her version was narrower: if Epstein was murdered, she suggested it was more likely an “internal” prison situation involving corruption, inmate violence, or catastrophic jail mismanagement. The key point is that the Maxwell camp’s position does not cleanly endorse every Epstein murder theory; it casts doubt on the official suicide conclusion while also trying to steer suspicion away from the elite network around Epstein and toward the broken, filthy machinery of the federal jail where he died. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

30 de may de 202652 min
episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein, The Exclusive Dinners And EDGE (5/30/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein, The Exclusive Dinners And EDGE (5/30/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s relationship with John Brockman was one of the clearest examples of how Epstein bought his way into elite intellectual culture. Brockman was a powerful literary agent and the founder of Edge, a high-status salon world that brought together scientists, technologists, writers, entrepreneurs, and billionaires. Epstein used Brockman’s orbit as a legitimacy machine: not merely to meet famous thinkers, but to place himself inside the room where wealth, science, technology, and cultural prestige overlapped. Reporting has described Brockman as a key connector who helped Epstein gain access to prominent academics and scientists, while Epstein’s money helped support Edge-related activities. BuzzFeed reported in 2019 that Epstein was Edge’s largest financial donor and that his association with Edge gave him access to leading scientists and tech figures. Later DOJ-released material and reporting showed that Epstein continued trying to stay close to that world years after his 2008 conviction, which is what makes the relationship so ugly: Brockman’s intellectual network gave Epstein a way to rebrand himself as a patron of science rather than a registered sex offender. The “Billionaires’ Dinner” was the perfect stage for that laundering operation. Hosted around the TED conference world, the Edge dinners gathered the kind of people Epstein desperately wanted to be seen with: Silicon Valley titans, famous scientists, investors, authors, and cultural power brokers. Epstein attended those gatherings from the early 2000s and reportedly as late as 2011, after his conviction, and earlier Edge material even described the dinner as one of Epstein’s favorite events before references to him were later scrubbed. The significance is not that every person at those dinners was involved in Epstein’s crimes; it is that Epstein understood proximity as power. If he could sit among billionaires, Nobel-level scientists, tech founders, and public intellectuals, he could turn their presence into camouflage. Brockman’s world gave Epstein exactly what he needed after his criminal exposure: intellectual polish, elite access, and a room full of respected people whose proximity helped him look less like a predator and more like a misunderstood financier with “interesting ideas.” to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

30 de may de 202643 min
episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Popularity In Hollywood (5/30/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Popularity In Hollywood (5/30/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s relationship with Woody Allen was not some passing handshake or random name in an address book. Public reporting and released records have described Allen and Soon-Yi Previn as longtime friends and neighbors of Epstein in New York, with the three dining together often and maintaining contact even after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Newly released emails added more texture to that relationship, including records showing Epstein helped arrange a 2015 White House tour for Allen and Previn. That detail matters because it shows Epstein was not merely tolerated from a distance; he was still useful, still connected, and still treated as someone who could open doors for famous people. Allen has not been accused of criminal wrongdoing in connection with Epstein, but the relationship is still deeply uncomfortable because it fits the broader pattern of Epstein’s post-conviction life: even after becoming a registered sex offender, he remained welcome in elite social circles where fame, money, and access insulated people from ordinary reputational consequences. Epstein’s Hollywood world was part of a much larger celebrity-access machine. His name and records have been connected over the years to actors, comedians, models, producers, media figures, and entertainment-adjacent power brokers, not necessarily as criminal participants, but as people moving through the same rooms, dinners, parties, foundations, flights, introductions, and favor networks. Figures such as Kevin Spacey, Chris Tucker, Naomi Campbell, Chelsea Handler, and others have appeared in public Epstein-related reporting or records in different contexts, while modeling-world connections also show how Epstein used glamour industries as another access point to young women and status. The key point is not that every famous person who encountered Epstein committed a crime; the key point is that Hollywood, like Wall Street, academia, politics, philanthropy, and royalty, was one more prestige ecosystem where Epstein could launder himself socially. He understood that being seen around celebrities created legitimacy, and the entertainment world gave him exactly what he craved: proximity to fame, cultural polish, beautiful people, and the illusion that his criminal past could be buried under enough dinner invitations and famous names. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

30 de may de 202653 min