The Vault: The Epstein Files

The Archives: Andrew And His Trips To Thailand With Jeffrey Epstein And Ghislaine Maxwell

21 min · 2. juni 2026
episode The Archives: Andrew And His Trips To Thailand With Jeffrey Epstein And Ghislaine Maxwell cover

Beskrivelse

The trip that Prince Andrew, Jeffrey Epstein, and Ghislaine Maxwell allegedly took to Thailand was emblematic of the troubling, blurred lines between official duties and personal indulgence that marked Andrew’s association with Epstein and Maxwell. According to multiple published accounts, the excursion was ostensibly part of Andrew’s role as a trade envoy or a royal visit, but reports claim that it quickly devolved into a series of highly inappropriate activities far removed from any diplomatic mission. One biographer asserts that during the stay in Bangkok, Andrew arranged for dozens of women to be brought to his luxury hotel over several days—ostensibly under the cover of his official duties and at public expense—raising serious ethical and reputational questions about how he used his position and resources for private gratification rather than state business. These accounts, though contested and not part of official legal records, fit into a broader pattern of behavior that has dogged Andrew’s public life with scandal and suspicion. Beyond the sensational claims of the Thailand trip itself, the involvement of Epstein and Maxwell highlights how Andrew’s friendships with these figures repeatedly drew him into morally and legally fraught situations. Epstein and Maxwell were central figures in trafficking networks that exploited vulnerable young women, and their presence alongside Andrew on trips and at social events underscores the degree to which he tolerated or embraced company that should have been avoided. Even as Epstein’s criminality became widely known, Andrew maintained contact with him and continued to socialize in ways that blurred accountability and oversight, culminating in diplomatic embarrassment, public outrage, and legal scrutiny years later. The Thailand episode is thus not an isolated scandal but part of a pattern of reckless behavior and poor judgment that has had lasting consequences for Andrew’s reputation. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av The Vault: The Epstein Files sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

998 Episoder

episode Mega Edition: The Palm Beach Officials Who Refused to Let The Epstein Case Die (6/12/26) cover

Mega Edition: The Palm Beach Officials Who Refused to Let The Epstein Case Die (6/12/26)

Joseph Recarey was the Palm Beach police detective who did the real street-level investigative work when Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse first came into law enforcement view in the mid-2000s. He interviewed victims, tracked down witnesses, built timelines, collected corroborating details, and helped expose that Epstein’s conduct was not an isolated allegation but a pattern involving numerous girls. Recarey’s work helped show the scale of what was happening behind the walls of Epstein’s Palm Beach mansion, and his investigation directly challenged the softer treatment Epstein later received from higher levels of the justice system. He died in 2018, before Epstein’s second arrest, but his role remains central because he was one of the investigators who actually treated the girls like victims and treated Epstein like a predator, not some untouchable financier who deserved special handling. Michael Reiter was the Palm Beach police chief who backed the investigation and refused to let Epstein’s wealth, lawyers, and social standing bury the case quietly. Reiter pushed the matter forward when prosecutors appeared reluctant to pursue Epstein aggressively, and he later became one of the most important critics of how the case was handled by state and federal authorities. He argued that Epstein received preferential treatment and that the evidence supported a much more serious prosecution than the deal Epstein ultimately received. Together, Recarey and Reiter represent the part of the Epstein story where local police did their job, built a case, and recognized the scope of the abuse—only to watch the machinery above them narrow, soften, and ultimately protect Epstein through a sweetheart outcome that has haunted the case ever since. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

12. juni 20261 h 1 min
episode Kash Patel's Transparency Claims Get Smacked With A Community Note On X cover

Kash Patel's Transparency Claims Get Smacked With A Community Note On X

FBI Director Kash Patel recently claimed on X that his agency has delivered on promises of "transparency," but the post was flagged with a Community Note adding context and pushback. The note reminded viewers that many documents tied to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein remain sealed or redacted, and questioned Patel’s assertion that court orders were the main barrier to releasing full files. Critics say the claim glosses over this opacity. Patel's broader handling of the Epstein matter has drawn scrutiny from lawmakers, who pressed him on whether all relevant records have been reviewed or disclosed. In recent hearings, he declined to answer some questions — including how often former President Trump appears in the files — and defended the FBI’s disclosures by saying they had released all "legally allowed" material. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

12. juni 202613 min