Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

Inside The OIG Interview: The Testimony Of An Unnamed CO/Lieutenant (Part 2) (5/19/26)

12 min · 19 de may de 202612 min
portada del episodio Inside The OIG Interview: The Testimony Of An Unnamed CO/Lieutenant (Part 2) (5/19/26)

Descripción

In a sworn interview with DOJ Office of Inspector General investigators conducted on June 14, 2021, an unnamed lieutenant and former correctional officer from MCC New York was questioned as part of the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein’s death and the broader security failures surrounding his incarceration. The interview began with investigators explicitly stating that the probe focused not only on Epstein’s death itself, but also “everything that surrounds that time,” including job performance failures and security breakdowns. The correctional officer agreed to a voluntary interview under oath and spent much of the early questioning outlining his career history, including prior work as a New York City probation officer, a brief stint with New York State corrections, and his transfer to MCC New York in 2013 after beginning his BOP career at Allenwood in Pennsylvania. The deposition is another piece of the sprawling federal effort to reconstruct exactly what happened inside MCC New York before Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his cell on August 10, 2019. Investigators were clearly trying to map out the staffing structure, chain of command, and personnel who were present during the chaotic period surrounding Epstein’s incarceration, including after his first alleged suicide attempt. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00111284.pdf [https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%209/EFTA00111284.pdf]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y forma parte de 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
Prueba gratis

Todos los episodios

1000 episodios

episode Inside The OIG Interview: The Testimony Of An Unnamed CO/Lieutenant (Part 2) (5/19/26) artwork

Inside The OIG Interview: The Testimony Of An Unnamed CO/Lieutenant (Part 2) (5/19/26)

In a sworn interview with DOJ Office of Inspector General investigators conducted on June 14, 2021, an unnamed lieutenant and former correctional officer from MCC New York was questioned as part of the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein’s death and the broader security failures surrounding his incarceration. The interview began with investigators explicitly stating that the probe focused not only on Epstein’s death itself, but also “everything that surrounds that time,” including job performance failures and security breakdowns. The correctional officer agreed to a voluntary interview under oath and spent much of the early questioning outlining his career history, including prior work as a New York City probation officer, a brief stint with New York State corrections, and his transfer to MCC New York in 2013 after beginning his BOP career at Allenwood in Pennsylvania. The deposition is another piece of the sprawling federal effort to reconstruct exactly what happened inside MCC New York before Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his cell on August 10, 2019. Investigators were clearly trying to map out the staffing structure, chain of command, and personnel who were present during the chaotic period surrounding Epstein’s incarceration, including after his first alleged suicide attempt. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00111284.pdf [https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%209/EFTA00111284.pdf]

19 de may de 202612 min
episode The Epstein Criminal Enterprise And The Nadia Marcinkova Conundrum (Part 2) (5/19/26) artwork

The Epstein Criminal Enterprise And The Nadia Marcinkova Conundrum (Part 2) (5/19/26)

Nadia Marcinko, born Nadia Marcinková in Slovakia, is being pulled back into the Epstein story because Congress is now moving closer to the uncomfortable gray zone that has always surrounded Epstein’s inner circle: the line between victim, girlfriend, employee, facilitator, and protected potential co-conspirator. Marcinko reportedly met Epstein when she was an 18-year-old model, later became a pilot, and spent years as one of his closest companions. She was one of the four women named by prosecutors in Epstein’s 2008 plea deal as “potential co-conspirators,” alongside figures like Sarah Kellen and Lesley Groff, but she has never been criminally charged. Marcinko has also described herself as a victim of Epstein, saying she was physically and psychologically abused by him. The renewed interest comes as congressional investigators begin questioning Epstein-linked women who were protected by the original Florida plea arrangement, forcing a broader public reckoning with how Epstein’s system actually functioned. The central issue is whether someone inside Epstein’s world could have been both exploited by him and later used by him to help maintain access, movement, legitimacy, and control. Marcinko has largely disappeared from public view, but the BBC frames her as a potentially important witness because of her proximity to Epstein, her role as a pilot, her long relationship with him, and her inclusion in the controversial plea deal. Her possible testimony would not just be about her own story; it could help clarify how Epstein’s operation blurred coercion, loyalty, dependency, privilege, and protection into one of the most legally frustrating parts of the entire scandal. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Victim or enabler? Epstein girlfriend who could face questions despite plea deal [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cz92j3n3jvvo]

19 de may de 202612 min
episode The Epstein Criminal Enterprise And The Nadia Marcinkova Conundrum (Part 1) (5/19/26) artwork

The Epstein Criminal Enterprise And The Nadia Marcinkova Conundrum (Part 1) (5/19/26)

Nadia Marcinko, born Nadia Marcinková in Slovakia, is being pulled back into the Epstein story because Congress is now moving closer to the uncomfortable gray zone that has always surrounded Epstein’s inner circle: the line between victim, girlfriend, employee, facilitator, and protected potential co-conspirator. Marcinko reportedly met Epstein when she was an 18-year-old model, later became a pilot, and spent years as one of his closest companions. She was one of the four women named by prosecutors in Epstein’s 2008 plea deal as “potential co-conspirators,” alongside figures like Sarah Kellen and Lesley Groff, but she has never been criminally charged. Marcinko has also described herself as a victim of Epstein, saying she was physically and psychologically abused by him. The renewed interest comes as congressional investigators begin questioning Epstein-linked women who were protected by the original Florida plea arrangement, forcing a broader public reckoning with how Epstein’s system actually functioned. The central issue is whether someone inside Epstein’s world could have been both exploited by him and later used by him to help maintain access, movement, legitimacy, and control. Marcinko has largely disappeared from public view, but the BBC frames her as a potentially important witness because of her proximity to Epstein, her role as a pilot, her long relationship with him, and her inclusion in the controversial plea deal. Her possible testimony would not just be about her own story; it could help clarify how Epstein’s operation blurred coercion, loyalty, dependency, privilege, and protection into one of the most legally frustrating parts of the entire scandal. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Victim or enabler? Epstein girlfriend who could face questions despite plea deal [https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cz92j3n3jvvo]

19 de may de 202614 min
episode House Oversight Questions Tova Noel About Epstein’s Final Hours (5/19/26) artwork

House Oversight Questions Tova Noel About Epstein’s Final Hours (5/19/26)

Former MCC guard Tova Noel, believed to be the last person to see Jeffrey Epstein alive before his death in August 2019, testified before the House Oversight Committee that Epstein received “special treatment” while housed at the federal jail in Manhattan. According to lawmakers who attended the interview, Noel said Epstein was treated differently from other inmates, including receiving extra bed linens, access to a CPAP machine, and medications in a manner that stood out from normal inmate handling. That testimony immediately sharpened the central question surrounding Epstein’s custody: not simply whether he died by suicide, but how a high-profile inmate who had reportedly attempted suicide weeks earlier was still able to obtain the very materials later tied to his death. Noel also addressed questions about roughly $12,000 in cash deposits she received between April 2018 and July 2019, including one deposit shortly before Epstein died, saying those transfers had nothing to do with Epstein. Lawmakers noted that earlier FBI review of her bank records did not find evidence of a bribe, but the broader picture remains damning for MCC’s basic security failures. Noel and another guard had previously been charged with falsifying records to make it appear they performed required inmate checks, with both later reaching deals that led to the charges being dropped. The testimony adds another layer to the long-running scrutiny of Epstein’s death: a facility already plagued by staffing failures, missed rounds, falsified logs, unexplained special privileges, and a chain of custody so broken that even lawmakers who accept the official suicide finding are still asking how the system allowed it to happen. to contact me: bobycapucci@protonmail.com source: Epstein got 'special treatment' in jail, former guard tells House Oversight Committee - ABC News [https://abcnews.com/US/house-oversight-committee-interview-prison-guard-duty-epstein/story?id=133019125]

19 de may de 202614 min
episode Donald Trump And His Attacks on the Republicans Who Pushed Epstein Disclosure (5/19/26) artwork

Donald Trump And His Attacks on the Republicans Who Pushed Epstein Disclosure (5/19/26)

Trump’s campaign against the Republicans who signed the Epstein discharge petition is not ordinary party discipline; it is a punishment campaign aimed at anyone who helped force the Epstein files out of leadership control. The four Republican signers—Thomas Massie, Lauren Boebert, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and Nancy Mace—each became politically vulnerable once they attached themselves to the push for disclosure. Massie was attacked as the architect of the petition, Boebert as a loyal Trump ally who crossed the wrong line, Greene as a former insider who refused to back down, and Mace as an ambitious statewide candidate whose signature complicated the party’s effort to contain the issue. The common thread is not ideology, spending, foreign policy, or traditional Republican infighting. The common thread is Epstein-file transparency. Trump’s threats, insults, primary pressure, and public humiliation tactics show that the real offense was not disloyalty in the usual political sense, but helping create a mechanism that could force records into daylight without his control. That pattern adds another layer to the larger Epstein cover-up because it reveals how the containment system now works politically. A cover-up is not only sealed records, redactions, destroyed evidence, or agency silence; it is also the intimidation of lawmakers, the conversion of transparency into betrayal, and the use of primary threats to scare others away from asking the same questions. Trump’s eventual move toward supporting release does not erase the resistance that came before it, because the resistance is the revealing part. If the files were harmless, redundant, or politically meaningless, there would be no reason to attack every Republican who tried to force their disclosure. The fury itself suggests the archive remains explosive, not only because of Trump’s own proximity to Epstein, but because the files may expose a broader protection network involving powerful people, institutions, prosecutors, financiers, and government actors. By targeting the signers instead of embracing clean disclosure from the start, Trump placed himself on the side of control, containment, and managed release rather than real transparency. to contact  me bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

19 de may de 202623 min