Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 8) (6/28/26)

12 min · 28 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 8) (6/28/26)

Descripción

The nearly six-hour congressional interview focused on why Bill Gates continued meeting with Jeffrey Epstein after Epstein's 2008 conviction, what Gates knew about Epstein's conduct, and whether Epstein attempted to gain leverage over him. Gates testified that he met Epstein roughly 12 to 14 times between 2011 and 2014, saying he believed Epstein could help attract major philanthropic donations to global health initiatives through the Gates Foundation. He repeatedly described those meetings as "a mistake," insisted he never visited Epstein's private island, New Mexico ranch, or Florida residence, and said he never witnessed criminal conduct or participated in any of Epstein's illegal activities. Gates told lawmakers he ultimately concluded that Epstein had exaggerated both his financial connections and his ability to raise money for philanthropy. One of the most closely watched portions of the transcript concerned allegations that Epstein sought to pressure Gates using knowledge of Gates' personal life. Gates acknowledged several extramarital affairs and testified that Epstein appeared to have learned about them, later making what Gates described as "veiled" attempts at blackmail by referencing those relationships and seeking money connected to one of the women. Gates said he believed Epstein "contemplated" blackmail but maintained he was never actually blackmailed, never paid Epstein to keep information secret, and never committed crimes with him. Throughout the interview, Gates emphasized that his association with Epstein damaged his judgment and reputation, expressed support for releasing the Epstein files and for continued investigations, and said survivors deserve justice while denying any involvement in Epstein's trafficking operation or abuse of minors. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bill-Gates-Transcript.pdf [https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Bill-Gates-Transcript.pdf]

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episode The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 9) (6/28/26) artwork

The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 9) (6/28/26)

The nearly six-hour congressional interview focused on why Bill Gates continued meeting with Jeffrey Epstein after Epstein's 2008 conviction, what Gates knew about Epstein's conduct, and whether Epstein attempted to gain leverage over him. Gates testified that he met Epstein roughly 12 to 14 times between 2011 and 2014, saying he believed Epstein could help attract major philanthropic donations to global health initiatives through the Gates Foundation. He repeatedly described those meetings as "a mistake," insisted he never visited Epstein's private island, New Mexico ranch, or Florida residence, and said he never witnessed criminal conduct or participated in any of Epstein's illegal activities. Gates told lawmakers he ultimately concluded that Epstein had exaggerated both his financial connections and his ability to raise money for philanthropy. One of the most closely watched portions of the transcript concerned allegations that Epstein sought to pressure Gates using knowledge of Gates' personal life. Gates acknowledged several extramarital affairs and testified that Epstein appeared to have learned about them, later making what Gates described as "veiled" attempts at blackmail by referencing those relationships and seeking money connected to one of the women. Gates said he believed Epstein "contemplated" blackmail but maintained he was never actually blackmailed, never paid Epstein to keep information secret, and never committed crimes with him. Throughout the interview, Gates emphasized that his association with Epstein damaged his judgment and reputation, expressed support for releasing the Epstein files and for continued investigations, and said survivors deserve justice while denying any involvement in Epstein's trafficking operation or abuse of minors. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bill-Gates-Transcript.pdf [https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Bill-Gates-Transcript.pdf]

28 de jun de 202614 min
episode The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 8) (6/28/26) artwork

The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 8) (6/28/26)

The nearly six-hour congressional interview focused on why Bill Gates continued meeting with Jeffrey Epstein after Epstein's 2008 conviction, what Gates knew about Epstein's conduct, and whether Epstein attempted to gain leverage over him. Gates testified that he met Epstein roughly 12 to 14 times between 2011 and 2014, saying he believed Epstein could help attract major philanthropic donations to global health initiatives through the Gates Foundation. He repeatedly described those meetings as "a mistake," insisted he never visited Epstein's private island, New Mexico ranch, or Florida residence, and said he never witnessed criminal conduct or participated in any of Epstein's illegal activities. Gates told lawmakers he ultimately concluded that Epstein had exaggerated both his financial connections and his ability to raise money for philanthropy. One of the most closely watched portions of the transcript concerned allegations that Epstein sought to pressure Gates using knowledge of Gates' personal life. Gates acknowledged several extramarital affairs and testified that Epstein appeared to have learned about them, later making what Gates described as "veiled" attempts at blackmail by referencing those relationships and seeking money connected to one of the women. Gates said he believed Epstein "contemplated" blackmail but maintained he was never actually blackmailed, never paid Epstein to keep information secret, and never committed crimes with him. Throughout the interview, Gates emphasized that his association with Epstein damaged his judgment and reputation, expressed support for releasing the Epstein files and for continued investigations, and said survivors deserve justice while denying any involvement in Epstein's trafficking operation or abuse of minors. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Bill-Gates-Transcript.pdf [https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Bill-Gates-Transcript.pdf]

28 de jun de 202612 min
episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Open Wallet Policy At Harvard (6/28/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Open Wallet Policy At Harvard (6/28/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s ties to Harvard were not casual or incidental; they were deep, expensive, and reputationally useful to him. Harvard’s own 2020 review found that the university received $9.1 million from Epstein between 1998 and 2008, including a $6.5 million gift in 2003 that helped create the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics, led by professor Martin Nowak. Harvard said it stopped accepting direct gifts from Epstein after his 2008 conviction, but the damage was already done: Epstein had used Harvard’s prestige, faculty relationships, campus access, and scientific circles to launder his image as a serious intellectual patron instead of the predator he was. The scandal has not gone away because later reporting and congressional scrutiny raised questions about whether Harvard’s earlier internal reviews were incomplete, especially regarding Epstein’s post-conviction relationships with faculty, indirect funding, and connections to figures such as Larry Summers and George Church. In 2026, Rep. Jamie Raskin expanded an investigation into Harvard and Bard, seeking records on Epstein’s funding of research and his personal relationships with faculty, while Harvard also faced renewed scrutiny after newly released Epstein files showed the breadth of his academic network. The broader picture is that Epstein did not just donate money to Harvard; he embedded himself in elite academic life, using proximity to famous scholars and institutions to rehabilitate his public standing and maintain access to powerful circles long after his criminal conduct was known

28 de jun de 20261 h 1 min
episode Mega Edition: Leon Black And His Attempt To Sprint Away From The Shadow Of Epstein (6/28/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Leon Black And His Attempt To Sprint Away From The Shadow Of Epstein (6/28/26)

Leon Black has spent years trying to put as much distance as possible between himself and Jeffrey Epstein, even though the documented financial relationship was enormous and lasted long after Epstein’s 2008 conviction. Black’s public line has been that Epstein provided legitimate tax, estate, and philanthropic advice, that he did not know about Epstein’s “demonic life,” and that Epstein “duped and deceived” him. In his House Oversight testimony, Black denied involvement in Epstein’s crimes, denied paying Epstein for access to women, denied being blackmailed, and framed the relationship as a professional mistake rather than something darker. But that defense has always had a massive problem attached to it: Black paid Epstein roughly $158 million between 2012 and 2017, with Senate investigators putting the total at more than $170 million, for work Black says was bona fide financial advice. Black’s distancing campaign has included regret statements, an Apollo-commissioned outside review, stepping down from Apollo’s leadership in 2021, denying civil allegations, and settling with the U.S. Virgin Islands for $62.5 million without admitting wrongdoing. He has tried to draw a bright line between “Leon Black, client of Epstein’s financial advice” and “Jeffrey Epstein, sex trafficker,” but that line is hard to sell when Epstein was already a convicted sex offender and Black continued paying him staggering sums anyway. The story Black wants believed is that he knew the useful Epstein, not the criminal Epstein — the “Jekyll,” not the “Hyde.” The problem is that the money, timing, access, and secrecy make that separation look less like a clean break and more like a carefully managed effort to minimize what was, by any reasonable measure, one of Epstein’s most lucrative post-conviction relationships. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

28 de jun de 20261 h 10 min
episode Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein's Friends And The "I forgot" Defense Strategy (6/28/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein's Friends And The "I forgot" Defense Strategy (6/28/26)

Those close to Jeffrey Epstein have developed a remarkably convenient memory problem whenever the questions get specific. Again and again, the public sees the same pattern: powerful people admit they met Epstein, flew with Epstein, took money from Epstein, hired Epstein, accepted introductions from Epstein, visited his homes, answered his calls, or benefited from his network — but when asked what they knew, when they knew it, who else was there, what was discussed, or why they kept dealing with him after his conviction, suddenly the details vanish. Lesley Groff, Epstein’s longtime assistant, told Congress she knew nothing about the alleged abuse and described Epstein as a manipulator who kept people compartmentalized, while Bill Clinton warned that his testimony could be limited by memory gaps from events more than two decades old. That is why the “I don’t recall” routine is so hard to swallow. These were not random acquaintances bumping into Epstein at a cocktail party once; many were executives, politicians, academics, financiers, lawyers, assistants, and social power players whose entire careers depended on remembering meetings, money, favors, travel, relationships, and risk. Yet when Epstein becomes the subject, everyone suddenly becomes foggy, distant, uninformed, and tragically unaware. Maybe some people genuinely missed parts of the truth, but when so many sophisticated people all claim ignorance around the same predator, the same money, the same houses, the same planes, and the same circle of young women, it stops looking like bad memory and starts looking like self-preservation dressed up as confusion. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

28 de jun de 202659 min