Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 4) (6/26/26)

11 min · 26 jun 2026
aflevering The Bill Gates Epstein Related Congressional Transcripts (Part 4) (6/26/26) artwork

Beschrijving

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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aflevering What We Learned During the Tyler Robinson Preliminary Hearing (Part 2) (7/13/26) artwork

What We Learned During the Tyler Robinson Preliminary Hearing (Part 2) (7/13/26)

The five-day preliminary hearing gave the clearest public look yet at the case prosecutors have assembled against Tyler Robinson in the killing of Charlie Kirk. The state presented surveillance footage that investigators said tracked Robinson’s vehicle and movements around Utah Valley University, showed a figure reaching the rooftop firing position, and followed the alleged escape route toward the wooded area where a bolt-action rifle wrapped in a towel was recovered. Prosecutors also introduced DNA evidence linking Robinson to the rifle, ammunition, towel, and a tool allegedly used to engrave the cartridges. Digital messages attributed to Robinson appeared to discuss the rifle, the engraved rounds, fingerprints, retrieving the weapon, deleting messages, and staying silent with police. A recorded interview with Robinson’s former roommate and romantic partner, Lance Twiggs, added allegations that Robinson admitted what he had done, cried, and said he wished he had not done it. Taken together, prosecutors argued that the surveillance, physical evidence, DNA, messages, family recognition, surrender, and alleged admissions formed a continuous chain connecting Robinson to the planning, shooting, escape, and attempted concealment. The defense spent the hearing attacking the weaknesses inside that chain rather than offering a complete alternative account of the killing. Robinson’s lawyers emphasized that the surveillance footage does not show a clear facial image of the shooter, the damaged bullet fragment could not be conclusively matched to the recovered rifle, and DNA evidence can establish contact without proving when or why an item was handled. They also raised questions about secondary DNA transfer, Twiggs’s immunity agreement, the presence of his DNA on some evidence, missing clothing, an empty holster that was seen but never collected, and the use of edited or enhanced video compilations. The hearing did not determine Robinson’s guilt because the state only had to establish probable cause, not prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt. Testimony has concluded, but Judge Tony Graf has not yet issued a bind-over ruling. Both sides are expected to submit written arguments before returning to court on September 1, 2026, when the judge will consider whether Robinson should stand trial on aggravated murder and the additional firearm, obstruction, witness-tampering, and child-presence charges. The prosecution appears heavily favored to clear the relatively low probable-cause threshold, but the defense exposed several issues that could become central disputes if the case reaches a capital trial. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

13 jul 202620 min
aflevering What We Learned During the Tyler Robinson Preliminary Hearing (Part 1) (7/13/26) artwork

What We Learned During the Tyler Robinson Preliminary Hearing (Part 1) (7/13/26)

The five-day preliminary hearing gave the clearest public look yet at the case prosecutors have assembled against Tyler Robinson in the killing of Charlie Kirk. The state presented surveillance footage that investigators said tracked Robinson’s vehicle and movements around Utah Valley University, showed a figure reaching the rooftop firing position, and followed the alleged escape route toward the wooded area where a bolt-action rifle wrapped in a towel was recovered. Prosecutors also introduced DNA evidence linking Robinson to the rifle, ammunition, towel, and a tool allegedly used to engrave the cartridges. Digital messages attributed to Robinson appeared to discuss the rifle, the engraved rounds, fingerprints, retrieving the weapon, deleting messages, and staying silent with police. A recorded interview with Robinson’s former roommate and romantic partner, Lance Twiggs, added allegations that Robinson admitted what he had done, cried, and said he wished he had not done it. Taken together, prosecutors argued that the surveillance, physical evidence, DNA, messages, family recognition, surrender, and alleged admissions formed a continuous chain connecting Robinson to the planning, shooting, escape, and attempted concealment. The defense spent the hearing attacking the weaknesses inside that chain rather than offering a complete alternative account of the killing. Robinson’s lawyers emphasized that the surveillance footage does not show a clear facial image of the shooter, the damaged bullet fragment could not be conclusively matched to the recovered rifle, and DNA evidence can establish contact without proving when or why an item was handled. They also raised questions about secondary DNA transfer, Twiggs’s immunity agreement, the presence of his DNA on some evidence, missing clothing, an empty holster that was seen but never collected, and the use of edited or enhanced video compilations. The hearing did not determine Robinson’s guilt because the state only had to establish probable cause, not prove the charges beyond a reasonable doubt. Testimony has concluded, but Judge Tony Graf has not yet issued a bind-over ruling. Both sides are expected to submit written arguments before returning to court on September 1, 2026, when the judge will consider whether Robinson should stand trial on aggravated murder and the additional firearm, obstruction, witness-tampering, and child-presence charges. The prosecution appears heavily favored to clear the relatively low probable-cause threshold, but the defense exposed several issues that could become central disputes if the case reaches a capital trial. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

13 jul 202614 min
aflevering New Mexico Investigators Still Waiting for Epstein Records (7/13/26) artwork

New Mexico Investigators Still Waiting for Epstein Records (7/13/26)

New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez is accusing the U.S. Department of Justice of obstructing his office’s renewed criminal investigation into Jeffrey Epstein’s Zorro Ranch by withholding unredacted federal records. Torrez said more than 130 days had passed since New Mexico first requested the material, despite six separate attempts to obtain assistance from federal officials. His office reopened the investigation in February 2026 after newly released records indicated that multiple survivors had allegedly been taken to the ranch and sexually abused there. Torrez argues that the unredacted files could identify survivors, witnesses, suspected co-conspirators and other people necessary for investigators to determine what happened at the property and whether prosecutable crimes remain. The dispute is especially significant because New Mexico previously suspended its investigation in 2019 after federal prosecutors asked the state to stand down while they pursued their case against Epstein. Epstein died in federal custody before that prosecution could be completed, leaving the alleged crimes at Zorro Ranch without a full accounting. Torrez warned that the continued delay is damaging the investigation as witnesses become harder to locate and evidence deteriorates or becomes more difficult to authenticate. The Justice Department disputes that it has stonewalled New Mexico and says it responded to the state’s requests and is prepared to assist, but Torrez has threatened to treat the request as formally denied at the end of July and potentially seek the records through a state court subpoena. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Trump Administration Accused by New Mexico of Blocking Crucial Jeffrey Epstein Ranch Files | IBTimes UK [https://www.ibtimes.co.uk/new-mexico-ag-accuses-usdoj-delaying-justice-epstein-victims-1808229]

13 jul 202611 min
aflevering Kathryn Ruemmler Set to Testify About Her Epstein Ties (7/13/26) artwork

Kathryn Ruemmler Set to Testify About Her Epstein Ties (7/13/26)

Kathryn Ruemmler, Goldman Sachs’ former chief legal officer and current senior counsel, is scheduled to testify before the House Oversight Committee as lawmakers investigate her relationship with Jeffrey Epstein and the federal government’s handling of his crimes. Ruemmler stepped down from Goldman’s top legal position at the end of June after newly released Justice Department records revealed that her contacts with Epstein were more extensive than previously known. Those records reportedly show numerous communications between the two from 2014 through 2019, years after Epstein’s 2008 conviction, as well as gifts Ruemmler accepted from him and advice she provided about responding to media questions concerning his criminal history The records also indicate that Epstein called Ruemmler’s cellphone on July 6, 2019, the day of his federal arrest on sex-trafficking charges. Ruemmler’s spokesperson has maintained that she did nothing improper, knew nothing about any ongoing criminal conduct and took no action after the brief call. Members of Congress are expected to question her about what she knew, whom Epstein discussed with her and how he maintained his influence among powerful institutions. Lawmakers have also criticized Goldman Sachs for retaining Ruemmler in an advisory role, arguing that the decision raises serious questions about the bank’s due diligence and its judgment concerning her ties to Epstein. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Congress to grill Goldman Sachs executive over newly revealed Epstein ties | The Independent [https://www.the-independent.com/news/world/americas/crime/kathryn-ruemmler-jeffrey-epstein-congress-goldman-sachs-b3013782.html]

13 jul 202610 min
aflevering Beatrice, Eugenie and the Burden of Prince Andrew’s Disgrace (7/13/26) artwork

Beatrice, Eugenie and the Burden of Prince Andrew’s Disgrace (7/13/26)

Prince Andrew appears to be using his daughters once again as human shields against the continuing fallout from his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. Reports that he encouraged Beatrice and Eugenie to attend prominent royal and society events with their heads held high suggest an effort to keep the York family publicly visible and to demonstrate that they have not been completely cast out. Rather than allowing his daughters to build identities separate from his disgrace, Andrew’s strategy risks turning every appearance they make into a referendum on him. Their royal status, popularity and continued access to respectable circles can then be presented as indirect evidence that the family remains accepted, even while Andrew himself is sidelined and facing renewed scrutiny. This is especially troubling because Andrew has already placed one of his daughters inside his defense of the allegations made by Virginia Giuffre. During his disastrous Newsnight interview, he invoked Beatrice while claiming that he had taken her to a birthday party at Pizza Express in Woking on the day Giuffre alleged she was trafficked to him, effectively making his daughter part of his alibi. Now, as the Epstein scandal continues to engulf the York family, Beatrice and Eugenie are again being pushed into public view while carrying consequences created by their father’s behavior. The princesses are not responsible for Andrew’s decisions, but his repeated reliance upon their names, visibility and royal legitimacy makes it appear that he is willing to let them absorb some of the pressure in his place. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EXCLUSIVE: Andrew Windsor 'Using Panicked Daughters' to Fight Royal Exile [https://radaronline.com/p/andrew-windsor-using-daughters-princess-beatrice-eugenie-royal-exile/]

13 jul 202612 min