Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch Hit's The Market Before Selling For A Reduced Price (7/6/26)

51 min · 7 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch Hit's The Market Before Selling For A Reduced Price (7/6/26)

Descripción

Zorro Ranch, Jeffrey Epstein’s sprawling New Mexico property, hit the market in 2021 after years of being tied to allegations of abuse, trafficking, secrecy, and unanswered questions. The estate first listed the ranch for $27.5 million, a huge asking price for a property carrying one of the darkest names in American criminal history. But the market did not exactly rush in. The ranch sat for roughly two years, burdened not just by its remote location and specialized compound layout, but by the stain of Epstein’s crimes and the fact that survivors had alleged abuse occurred there. Eventually, the price was cut sharply, dropping from $27.5 million to $18 million, a nearly $10 million reduction that showed just how toxic the property had become. In August 2023, Epstein’s estate confirmed that Zorro Ranch had finally sold, though the sale price was initially undisclosed. The buyer was a newly registered company, later reporting identified as tied to the family of Texas businessman and former state senator Don Huffines, and the proceeds were described as going toward administration of the estate and payment of creditors. That sale did not close the book on the ranch; if anything, it reopened questions about why the property had never received the same level of law-enforcement scrutiny as Epstein’s other locations. By 2026, New Mexico authorities had reopened their investigation and searched the former ranch, now under new ownership, underscoring that the sale may have transferred the deed, but it did not erase the shadow hanging over the property. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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episode The Royal Alibi That a Restaurant Took More Seriously Than Scotland Yard (7/7/26) artwork

The Royal Alibi That a Restaurant Took More Seriously Than Scotland Yard (7/7/26)

Pizza Express carried out an internal inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s infamous claim that he was at its Woking branch on March 10, 2001 — the same date Virginia Giuffre alleged she was sexually abused by him after being trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein. Andrew used the Woking visit during his 2019 BBC Newsnight interview as part of his denial, saying he had taken Princess Beatrice to a children’s party there and remembered it because going to Pizza Express in Woking was an unusual thing for him to do. According to the BBC’s reporting, Pizza Express checked what it could, including records and former staff, but found no evidence proving he had been there — and no evidence definitively proving he had not. BBC Newsnight also revisited the claim and found no record of anyone seeing Andrew at the restaurant that day. The BBC tried to get answers from the Metropolitan Police about whether royal protection officers had accompanied him, but the Met refused to confirm or deny whether it held relevant information, citing national security and protection issues. So the bottom line is brutal: one of Andrew’s most famous Epstein alibis remains unsupported by any clear public evidence, and the most visible attempt to test it appears to have come not from police producing a clean answer, but from Pizza Express itself trying to verify whether the former royal was ever actually in that Woking branch. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Pizza Express held inquiry into Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's Woking claim [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1my27lyjx9o]

7 de jul de 202611 min
episode Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch Hit's The Market Before Selling For A Reduced Price (7/6/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch Hit's The Market Before Selling For A Reduced Price (7/6/26)

Zorro Ranch, Jeffrey Epstein’s sprawling New Mexico property, hit the market in 2021 after years of being tied to allegations of abuse, trafficking, secrecy, and unanswered questions. The estate first listed the ranch for $27.5 million, a huge asking price for a property carrying one of the darkest names in American criminal history. But the market did not exactly rush in. The ranch sat for roughly two years, burdened not just by its remote location and specialized compound layout, but by the stain of Epstein’s crimes and the fact that survivors had alleged abuse occurred there. Eventually, the price was cut sharply, dropping from $27.5 million to $18 million, a nearly $10 million reduction that showed just how toxic the property had become. In August 2023, Epstein’s estate confirmed that Zorro Ranch had finally sold, though the sale price was initially undisclosed. The buyer was a newly registered company, later reporting identified as tied to the family of Texas businessman and former state senator Don Huffines, and the proceeds were described as going toward administration of the estate and payment of creditors. That sale did not close the book on the ranch; if anything, it reopened questions about why the property had never received the same level of law-enforcement scrutiny as Epstein’s other locations. By 2026, New Mexico authorities had reopened their investigation and searched the former ranch, now under new ownership, underscoring that the sale may have transferred the deed, but it did not erase the shadow hanging over the property. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7 de jul de 202651 min
episode Mega Edition: The Legacy Media Ignored The Epstein Story For Years. What Changed? (7/6/26) artwork

Mega Edition: The Legacy Media Ignored The Epstein Story For Years. What Changed? (7/6/26)

For decades, much of the legacy media treated Jeffrey Epstein’s world with a caution that often functioned like protection for the powerful people around him. The allegations against Epstein were not new, and neither were the questions about the wealthy, political, academic, royal, and corporate figures who orbited him. But instead of sustained, aggressive scrutiny, the story was often handled as a lurid scandal, a Palm Beach crime story, or a legal oddity tied to one rich predator and his sweetheart deal. The deeper questions — who enabled him, who visited him, who vouched for him, who took his money, who flew with him, who helped rehabilitate him after his conviction, and who benefited from the silence — were too often softened, delayed, or buried under careful language. That caution gave Epstein’s associates years of breathing room. It allowed them to issue denials, hide behind “no knowledge” statements, lean on reputations, and wait for public attention to move on. Only in recently did mainstream outlets begin treating Epstein’s network as the central story rather than a side issue. By then, many of the most important questions had already aged into fog: memories faded, records disappeared, witnesses died, settlements sealed things away, and powerful people had time to clean up their narratives. The failure was not always outright conspiracy; sometimes it was cowardice, access journalism, legal fear, class bias, institutional deference, and the old media instinct to treat elite men as credible until the evidence becomes impossible to ignore. But the result was the same. Epstein’s associates were not forced into the light when it mattered most, and the survivors were left screaming into a system that only started listening once the cover story had already begun to collapse. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7 de jul de 202652 min
episode Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch, The Management Team And The Unanswered Questions (7/6/26) artwork

Mega Edition: Zorro Ranch, The Management Team And The Unanswered Questions (7/6/26)

Zorro Ranch remains one of the most unresolved locations in the Jeffrey Epstein story because it was not just a vacation property; it was a remote, controlled environment where Epstein could operate with privacy, distance, and enormous logistical control. The ranch has long been tied to allegations, questions about who visited, who stayed there, what staff saw, how guests were moved around, what records were kept, and whether evidence was missed, ignored, destroyed, or never properly pursued. Unlike Epstein’s Manhattan mansion or Palm Beach residence, Zorro Ranch sat in isolation, which made the people who worked there even more important. In a place that remote, caretakers, groundskeepers, house staff, drivers, security personnel, and property managers would have been among the few people positioned to understand the rhythm of the operation: who came and went, what areas were restricted, what routines were normal, what was unusual, and what changed after Epstein came under scrutiny. That is why the ranch caretakers matter so much, even though they have not been accused of crimes and should not be treated as criminals without evidence. Their importance is evidentiary, not accusatory. People who maintain a property like that can become living archives: they may know about guest patterns, construction changes, locked rooms, storage areas, document handling, security systems, staff instructions, deliveries, cleanup efforts, and whether outside agencies ever conducted a serious search. If they have not been fully deposed or questioned under oath, that leaves a glaring hole in the public record. The secrets of Zorro Ranch may not only be buried in files, flight logs, or real estate documents; they may be sitting in the memories of people who worked the land, opened the gates, watched the houses, kept the systems running, and saw the operation from the inside while the powerful people passed through and disappeared back into silence. to ocntact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7 de jul de 202641 min
episode How Epstein’s Operation Required a Network the DOJ Won’t Confront artwork

How Epstein’s Operation Required a Network the DOJ Won’t Confront

The Department of Justice’s long-standing claim that Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell acted alone is contradicted by the government’s own records. Federal prosecutors explicitly acknowledged the existence of multiple co-conspirators as early as the 2007–2008 Florida investigation, including in the Non-Prosecution Agreement that granted immunity to Epstein and unnamed others. Sworn testimony, sealed filings, and investigative activity confirm that Epstein’s crimes required an organized network of recruiters, schedulers, transporters, financial managers, and legal fixers operating across jurisdictions for years. Despite this, the DOJ has consistently narrowed its framing to portray the case as a two-person operation, avoiding any comprehensive conspiracy prosecution. That decision was not driven by a lack of evidence, but by institutional restraint, selective inquiry, and an unwillingness to confront the broader implications of its own past decisions. The DOJ continues to justify secrecy by invoking victim privacy, even though survivors themselves were excluded from key prosecutorial decisions and have repeatedly called for transparency. Redactions, sealed documents, and the refusal to name co-conspirators function less as victim protection and more as insulation for the government and its prior conduct. A full accounting would expose prosecutorial failures, political interference, and decades of discretionary choices that allowed Epstein to operate with impunity. The continuity of this behavior across administrations—including during the Trump DOJ—demonstrates that the issue is structural, not partisan. At bottom, the DOJ is not merely protecting Epstein’s associates; it is protecting itself and the institutional role it played in creating, enabling, and shielding one of the most consequential criminal enterprises in modern history. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

7 de jul de 202613 min