The Vault: The Epstein Files

The Sarah Kellen Congressional Transcript (Part 10) (6/15/26)

14 min · 16 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Sarah Kellen Congressional Transcript (Part 10) (6/15/26)

Descripción

Sarah Kellen told Congress that she was not a willing architect of Jeffrey Epstein’s operation but one of his victims, claiming Epstein groomed, abused, isolated, and controlled her for years. She described herself as trapped inside his world through sexual, psychological, and emotional coercion, and said Epstein continued to exert power over her even while he was incarcerated. That testimony matters because Kellen has long been one of the most controversial names in the Epstein case: she was not some distant acquaintance or occasional employee, but a close assistant whose name appeared in the non-prosecution agreement and whose alleged role has been described by survivors as central to the scheduling, travel, and logistics that made Epstein’s abuse machine function. The skeptical read is that Kellen’s testimony may explain parts of her relationship with Epstein, but it does not automatically erase the serious questions about what she did, what she knew, and how long she remained embedded in his operation. Being abused by Epstein and enabling Epstein’s access to other victims are not mutually exclusive possibilities, and that is the uncomfortable center of the issue. Her testimony shifts the frame from co-conspirator to coerced participant, but Congress and the public still have to weigh that against the survivor accounts, the documented logistics, the years of proximity, and the fact that Epstein’s criminal enterprise required trusted people to keep the appointments, movements, and access points running. In plain terms, Kellen may have been victimized by Epstein, but that does not settle the question of whether she also helped him victimize others. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: 2026-05-21 Sarah Kellen - Transcript.pdf - Google Drive [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nPDWYcqxugpod1-b98xuayS-RkUtrcyS/view?pli=1]

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episode Judge Sweets Opinion Denying Maxwell's Request For Summary Judgement (Part 5) artwork

Judge Sweets Opinion Denying Maxwell's Request For Summary Judgement (Part 5)

In the defamation lawsuit filed by Virginia Giuffre against Ghislaine Maxwell, Judge Robert W. Sweet presided over Maxwell's motion for summary judgment, which sought to dismiss Giuffre's claims without proceeding to trial. In his opinion and order, Judge Sweet denied Maxwell's motion, determining that genuine disputes over material facts existed, particularly concerning the truthfulness of the statements made by both parties. This decision underscored the necessity for a jury to evaluate the credibility of the conflicting accounts presented. Judge Sweet's ruling emphasized that the central issue in the case was the veracity of Maxwell's public statements denying Giuffre's allegations of sexual abuse and trafficking. By denying the motion for summary judgment, he allowed the defamation claims to proceed to trial, highlighting the importance of a thorough examination of the evidence and testimonies from both sides. This decision reflected the court's recognition of the complexities involved in cases alleging defamation intertwined with serious accusations of misconduct. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

16 de jun de 202615 min
episode The Sarah Kellen Congressional Transcript (Part 10) (6/15/26) artwork

The Sarah Kellen Congressional Transcript (Part 10) (6/15/26)

Sarah Kellen told Congress that she was not a willing architect of Jeffrey Epstein’s operation but one of his victims, claiming Epstein groomed, abused, isolated, and controlled her for years. She described herself as trapped inside his world through sexual, psychological, and emotional coercion, and said Epstein continued to exert power over her even while he was incarcerated. That testimony matters because Kellen has long been one of the most controversial names in the Epstein case: she was not some distant acquaintance or occasional employee, but a close assistant whose name appeared in the non-prosecution agreement and whose alleged role has been described by survivors as central to the scheduling, travel, and logistics that made Epstein’s abuse machine function. The skeptical read is that Kellen’s testimony may explain parts of her relationship with Epstein, but it does not automatically erase the serious questions about what she did, what she knew, and how long she remained embedded in his operation. Being abused by Epstein and enabling Epstein’s access to other victims are not mutually exclusive possibilities, and that is the uncomfortable center of the issue. Her testimony shifts the frame from co-conspirator to coerced participant, but Congress and the public still have to weigh that against the survivor accounts, the documented logistics, the years of proximity, and the fact that Epstein’s criminal enterprise required trusted people to keep the appointments, movements, and access points running. In plain terms, Kellen may have been victimized by Epstein, but that does not settle the question of whether she also helped him victimize others. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: 2026-05-21 Sarah Kellen - Transcript.pdf - Google Drive [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1nPDWYcqxugpod1-b98xuayS-RkUtrcyS/view?pli=1]

16 de jun de 202614 min
episode Epstein Survivors Press Comer to Pursue Unresolved DOJ Leads (6/16/26) artwork

Epstein Survivors Press Comer to Pursue Unresolved DOJ Leads (6/16/26)

A group of Jeffrey Epstein survivors and relatives of the late Virginia Giuffre met privately with House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer and urged him to pursue allegations contained in the Justice Department’s own Epstein files. The group challenged acting Attorney General Todd Blanche’s position that investigators had exhausted all meaningful leads, presenting Comer with specific documents they believe point toward further avenues of inquiry. Among the materials were an email containing a list of men associated with Epstein and Giuffre’s 2015 testimony to investigators, which the survivors said could help Congress identify allegations involving powerful individuals that deserve renewed scrutiny. The meeting was intended to give Comer’s investigation greater direction by moving beyond the broad release of millions of pages and concentrating on particular names, allegations and unresolved questions within the records. The survivors’ message was that the government cannot credibly declare the matter finished while potentially significant claims remain unexamined and while Epstein’s victims continue to identify information they believe warrants investigation. Their appeal places additional pressure on Comer to use congressional subpoenas, interviews and public hearings to determine whether the Justice Department overlooked—or deliberately declined to pursue—evidence concerning other people within Epstein’s network. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Epstein survivors push Comer to investigate potential leads from DOJ’s files in private meeting | CNN Politics [https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/15/politics/jeffrey-epstein-victims-comer-meeting-doj]

16 de jun de 202614 min
episode Sarah Kellen And The Allegations That Epstein Paid Off A Guard In Palm Beach (Part 2) (6/16/26) artwork

Sarah Kellen And The Allegations That Epstein Paid Off A Guard In Palm Beach (Part 2) (6/16/26)

Sarah Kellen’s congressional testimony that Jeffrey Epstein allegedly paid a Palm Beach County jail guard for special favors may describe only one incident, but it fits the larger pattern of how Epstein operated. He treated institutions not as fixed systems of rules, but as collections of people, pressure points, and discretionary decisions that could be influenced through money, access, prestige, or personal relationships. His unusually permissive work-release arrangement already allowed him to leave jail for extended periods, maintain contact with employees, and preserve much of the machinery of his former life. If Kellen’s allegation is corroborated, it would suggest that even those extraordinary official privileges were not enough for him and that he continued seeking private exceptions inside the jail. The significance is not simply that one guard may have been compromised, but that Epstein apparently approached incarceration the same way he approached banks, universities, lawyers, politicians, and social circles: identify the weakness, cultivate the right person, and reshape the institution around his needs. That helps explain why moving the case away from a sweeping federal prosecution and into Florida state court was so valuable to Epstein. A federal case could have examined the full structure of his operation, exposed him to far greater punishment, encouraged witnesses to cooperate, and investigated the employees, recruiters, financial arrangements, travel, and possible co-conspirators surrounding him. The state resolution narrowed the conduct into limited prostitution-related charges, protected potential co-conspirators through the federal non-prosecution agreement, and placed Epstein inside a smaller local system where discretion could be exercised repeatedly on his behalf. His goal was not merely to receive a shorter sentence; it was to control the definition of the crime, the scope of the investigation, the conditions of confinement, and the public narrative afterward. The alleged guard payment, whether isolated or part of something broader, captures the central truth of the Epstein case: even when the justice system supposedly took control of him, Epstein continued searching for ways to take control of the justice system. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

16 de jun de 202617 min
episode Sarah Kellen And The Allegations That Epstein Paid Off A Guard In Palm Beach (Part 1) (6/16/26) artwork

Sarah Kellen And The Allegations That Epstein Paid Off A Guard In Palm Beach (Part 1) (6/16/26)

Sarah Kellen’s congressional testimony that Jeffrey Epstein allegedly paid a Palm Beach County jail guard for special favors may describe only one incident, but it fits the larger pattern of how Epstein operated. He treated institutions not as fixed systems of rules, but as collections of people, pressure points, and discretionary decisions that could be influenced through money, access, prestige, or personal relationships. His unusually permissive work-release arrangement already allowed him to leave jail for extended periods, maintain contact with employees, and preserve much of the machinery of his former life. If Kellen’s allegation is corroborated, it would suggest that even those extraordinary official privileges were not enough for him and that he continued seeking private exceptions inside the jail. The significance is not simply that one guard may have been compromised, but that Epstein apparently approached incarceration the same way he approached banks, universities, lawyers, politicians, and social circles: identify the weakness, cultivate the right person, and reshape the institution around his needs. That helps explain why moving the case away from a sweeping federal prosecution and into Florida state court was so valuable to Epstein. A federal case could have examined the full structure of his operation, exposed him to far greater punishment, encouraged witnesses to cooperate, and investigated the employees, recruiters, financial arrangements, travel, and possible co-conspirators surrounding him. The state resolution narrowed the conduct into limited prostitution-related charges, protected potential co-conspirators through the federal non-prosecution agreement, and placed Epstein inside a smaller local system where discretion could be exercised repeatedly on his behalf. His goal was not merely to receive a shorter sentence; it was to control the definition of the crime, the scope of the investigation, the conditions of confinement, and the public narrative afterward. The alleged guard payment, whether isolated or part of something broader, captures the central truth of the Epstein case: even when the justice system supposedly took control of him, Epstein continued searching for ways to take control of the justice system. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

16 de jun de 202612 min