Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

Judge Orders DOJ to Hand Over More Unredacted Epstein Files (6/26/26)

11 min · 26 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Judge Orders DOJ to Hand Over More Unredacted Epstein Files (6/26/26)

Descripción

A federal judge has ordered the Department of Justice to turn over unredacted versions of some Jeffrey Epstein-related files or explain why the redactions should remain in place. U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan sided with independent journalist Katie Phang and the Public Integrity Project, finding that the DOJ likely violated the Epstein Files Transparency Act by withholding or heavily redacting certain materials. The DOJ has until July 2, 2026, to produce less-redacted documents, including sender and recipient information from emails, names of alleged co-conspirators in a draft indictment, and underlying FBI interview notes tied to an allegation against Donald Trump, which Trump has denied and which ABC notes was uncorroborated. Sullivan also ordered the DOJ to publish a log explaining all redactions. The ruling adds another layer of pressure on the DOJ, which has already faced criticism from lawmakers and transparency advocates over how it handled the release of Epstein files after Congress passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act. According to ABC, the department has released thousands of pages but has also been accused of unnecessary redactions, missed deadlines, and withholding millions more pages that officials claim are duplicates, explicit material, or outside the law’s scope. The Public Integrity Project framed the ruling as a major transparency win, arguing that the government ignored the law to protect the rich and powerful, while the DOJ has continued to insist it complied with the statute. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Judge orders DOJ to turn over some unredacted Epstein files - ABC News [https://abcnews.com/Politics/judge-orders-doj-turn-unredacted-epstein-files/story?id=134228532]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

998 episodios

episode Mega Edition: Leon Black Is Chased From The Apollo Boardroom By The Epstein Allegations (7/2/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Leon Black Is Chased From The Apollo Boardroom By The Epstein Allegations (7/2/26)

Leon Black’s relationship with Jeffrey Epstein became impossible for Apollo Global Management to contain once reporting revealed that Black had paid Epstein staggering sums after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Black insisted the payments were for legitimate tax, estate, and financial-planning work, and an Apollo-commissioned review said it found no evidence that Black participated in Epstein’s crimes or that Epstein did business with Apollo. But the review still confirmed the central problem: Apollo’s billionaire co-founder and chief executive had maintained a massive financial relationship with Epstein long after Epstein was known publicly as a convicted sex offender. That alone shook investor confidence, damaged Apollo’s reputation, and raised serious questions about Black’s judgment. Black initially announced that he would step down as Apollo’s CEO while remaining chairman, presenting the move as part of a leadership transition. But the pressure did not stop there. The Epstein revelations had turned Black from Apollo’s greatest asset into a liability, creating reputational risk for the firm, tension inside the boardroom, and concern among clients and shareholders. Within months, Black gave up the chairman role as well, leaving Apollo’s leadership and clearing the way for Marc Rowan to take over. In the end, Black was not forced out because Apollo proved he committed Epstein’s crimes; he stepped down because his personal ties to Epstein became too damaging for one of the world’s most powerful investment firms to keep defending. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

2 de jul de 202648 min
episode Mega Edition: The USVI And It's Contentious Battle Against The Epstein Estate (7/1/26) artwork

Mega Edition: The USVI And It's Contentious Battle Against The Epstein Estate (7/1/26)

The U.S. Virgin Islands’ battle against Jeffrey Epstein’s estate was contentious from the beginning because it was not just a fight over money; it was a fight over accountability, secrecy, and control of Epstein’s remaining assets. After Epstein’s death, the territory accused his estate, companies, and representatives of helping preserve the infrastructure that allowed him to abuse and traffic girls and young women on Little St. James and Great St. James. The USVI sought to freeze assets, claw back profits, obtain records, and force the estate to answer for how Epstein used the islands as a base of operations. The estate, meanwhile, pushed back by arguing that the government was overreaching, that many claims should be handled through the victim compensation process, and that continued litigation would drain resources that could otherwise go to claimants. The fight became even more heated because the USVI was also under scrutiny for its own failures and contradictions. Epstein had received generous tax benefits and operated openly in the territory for years, which raised obvious questions about what local officials knew, ignored, or allowed. Still, then-Attorney General Denise George pressed aggressively, eventually reaching a settlement worth more than $105 million, plus half the proceeds from the sale of Little St. James and additional money for environmental remediation. That settlement was significant, but it did not erase the larger tension: the USVI was trying to hold Epstein’s estate accountable while also answering for how Epstein was able to build, fund, and protect so much of his operation in the territory in the first place. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

2 de jul de 202642 min
episode Mega Edition: The Battle Royal For Control Of Apollo In The Wake Of The Epstein Bombshell (7/2/26) artwork

Mega Edition: The Battle Royal For Control Of Apollo In The Wake Of The Epstein Bombshell (7/2/26)

Faith in Leon Black was badly shaken once the scale of his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein became public, because Black was not a distant acquaintance or a casual social contact — he had paid Epstein enormous sums after Epstein’s 2008 conviction while remaining the dominant figure at Apollo Global Management. Investors, board members, employees, and clients were suddenly forced to ask how the head of one of the world’s most powerful private-equity firms could have maintained such a lucrative relationship with Epstein and still claim he had no real idea who Epstein was. Apollo commissioned an outside review that found no evidence Black had been involved in Epstein’s crimes or that Epstein had done business with Apollo, but the review still confirmed enough damaging facts to make Black’s position unstable. The issue was no longer just reputational embarrassment; it became a question of judgment, governance, disclosure, and whether Black could still lead a major financial institution while carrying Epstein’s shadow into every room. That loss of confidence helped turn Apollo’s boardroom into a battleground. Black’s planned transition out of the CEO role was supposed to look orderly, but the Epstein revelations intensified old rivalries inside the firm, especially between Black, Josh Harris, and Marc Rowan. Harris reportedly saw the crisis as an opening to gain influence or control, while Rowan ultimately emerged as the successor with enough board support to take over. Black, meanwhile, accused Harris of trying to exploit the Epstein scandal to push him out, while Harris denied wrongdoing and the courts later dismissed Black’s racketeering claims. In the end, Epstein’s relationship with Black did not just damage one billionaire’s reputation; it fractured trust at Apollo, exposed power struggles among its founders, accelerated Black’s exit, blocked Harris from taking command, and cleared the way for Rowan to become the face of Apollo’s post-Epstein reset. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

2 de jul de 202640 min
episode The Operational Spine: How the DOJ’s Final Epstein “List” Avoids the Infrastructure artwork

The Operational Spine: How the DOJ’s Final Epstein “List” Avoids the Infrastructure

The DOJ’s so-called “list” is being framed as transparency, but it reads like controlled optics rather than a serious accounting of Jeffrey Epstein’s network. A genuine disclosure would distinguish between casual mentions and operational roles, provide context, explain methodology, and prioritize the people who facilitated recruitment, logistics, finances, and legal shielding. Instead, the document appears to emphasize ambiguity and volume over clarity, which fuels politicization and confusion. When key operational figures are absent and no structured explanation is offered, it raises legitimate questions about whether the release was designed to inform the public or to exhaust and divide it. Transparency without context isn’t transparency—it’s misdirection. At its core, the issue is institutional credibility. A trafficking enterprise of this scale required coordination, staffing, money flows, and protection, and any meaningful disclosure should illuminate that infrastructure rather than obscure it. If leadership presents a curated list without methodology, document categories, or clear definitions, the public is left to speculate while officials claim compliance. That dynamic erodes trust and shifts attention away from survivors and toward political infighting. The demand is straightforward: show the work, clarify omissions, and provide structured, auditable disclosure. Anything less invites suspicion that the priority is reputational protection, not accountability. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

2 de jul de 202615 min
episode Silicon Valley’s Dirty Secret: Jeffrey Epstein and the Tech Elite artwork

Silicon Valley’s Dirty Secret: Jeffrey Epstein and the Tech Elite

Federal prosecutors have released a massive  tranche of documents connected to the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein as part of a transparency law, and those files show his extensive ties to powerful figures in tech and beyond. The documents include emails and correspondence involving prominent tech leaders such as Elon Musk and Bill Gates, among others, discussing social plans, personal matters, and interactions with Epstein long after his 2008 conviction for soliciting prostitution involving a minor. Though appearing in the files does not imply criminal wrongdoing, the records show Musk asked Epstein about boat and holiday plans and expressed interest in visiting Epstein’s private Caribbean island, while Epstein drafted unsent emails containing unverified and salacious allegations about Gates. Both tech figures have publicly denied impropriety, with spokespersons and social media posts rebutting any misconduct and characterizing their connections as limited or misinterpreted. Beyond individual interactions, the broader batch of more than three million pages paints a picture of Epstein’s enduring access to elite social and business circles, including Silicon Valley and philanthropic networks. Documents suggest that Epstein remained welcome at exclusive dinners and gatherings with billionaire tech and finance leaders, and he even invested in early cryptocurrency ventures like Coinbase alongside major venture capital firms despite his criminal past. While the Justice Department has stated that the material does not establish a basis for new criminal charges, the release has reignited scrutiny of Epstein’s relationships with influential people and sparked political and public calls for fuller accountability for those whose names appear in the files. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Jeffrey Epstein files reveal deep tech ties, from Musk to Gates [https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/tech-news/jeffrey-epstein-files-reveal-deep-tech-ties-musk-gates-rcna257092]

2 de jul de 202625 min