Jeffrey Epstein: The Coverup Chronicles

Lesley Groff And The Transcript From Her Epstein Related Trip to Congress (Part 1) (7/2/26)

11 min · 2. juli 2026
episode Lesley Groff And The Transcript From Her Epstein Related Trip to Congress (Part 1) (7/2/26) cover

Beskrivelse

Lesley Groff told the House Oversight Committee that she worked for Jeffrey Epstein from February 2001 until July 2019 as his secretary/administrative assistant, handling scheduling, calls, travel coordination, calendars, and staff logistics. Her central position was that Epstein kept her separated from his criminal life, that she never witnessed abuse, never had a victim disclose abuse to her, and did not knowingly help Epstein or Maxwell commit crimes. She described Epstein as a “master manipulator” who lied to her and kept his “legitimate” world apart from his abuse, while acknowledging that she scheduled massage appointments when Epstein provided names and numbers, sometimes circulated calendars that included those appointments early on, and understood the massages as routine at the time. She said she did not personally meet the massage providers, did not know they were minors or young women, and assumed they were masseuses, even though members pressed her on why an extremely wealthy man would use rotating names and phone numbers instead of a professional massage service. The questioning also focused heavily on Epstein’s network and whether Groff had knowledge of powerful men being provided access to girls or young women through Epstein or Maxwell. Groff repeatedly answered no when asked whether she had arranged massages for prominent figures, knew of sexual activity involving minors or young women, or knew of anyone who knowingly facilitated Epstein’s crimes. She acknowledged scheduling or connecting Epstein with high-profile contacts, including Prince Andrew, Ehud Barak, Larry Summers, George Mitchell, John Kerry, Wesley Clark, Bill Clinton-related circles, and Donald Trump phone calls, but denied arranging Trump travel during her employment and denied knowledge of Trump-related law enforcement communications. She also said she never suspected Epstein or Maxwell of working with any intelligence service. Overall, Groff’s testimony was defensive and narrow: she admitted to being part of the machinery that kept Epstein’s calendar and contacts moving, but insisted she never saw the criminal operation underneath it and never knowingly enabled it. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source:   Lesley-Groff-Transcript.pdf [https://oversight.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Lesley-Groff-Transcript.pdf]

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episode Epstein Survivors Say That Lesley Groff Wasn't Honest With Congress (7/10/26) cover

Epstein Survivors Say That Lesley Groff Wasn't Honest With Congress (7/10/26)

Epstein survivors have publicly challenged Lesley Groff's testimony before Congress, arguing that her portrayal of herself as someone who knew nothing about Epstein's abuse operation is fundamentally incompatible with their experiences. During her June 2026 testimony, Groff described Epstein as a "master manipulator" who kept his criminal conduct hidden from her and insisted that she never knowingly scheduled appointments for minors or witnessed abuse. But several survivors told CNN and other outlets that Groff was far more deeply involved than she admitted, alleging that she arranged logistics, handled payments, possessed identifying documents that would have revealed victims' ages, and was present during key moments in Epstein's operation. For the survivors, the issue is not simply whether Groff knew every detail of Epstein's crimes; it is that they believe her testimony minimizes her role and rewrites history. Some of the women have said they directly interacted with Groff, received money from her, or provided her with personal information, making her claims of ignorance difficult for them to accept. Their criticism has been echoed by some lawmakers, who openly questioned the plausibility that someone who spent nearly two decades as Epstein's executive assistant, scheduling his daily activities and coordinating travel and "massages," remained entirely unaware of what was happening around her. Groff and her attorney continue to stand by her testimony, but for many survivors, her appearance before Congress was another example of an Epstein insider distancing herself from the operation rather than fully accounting for what she saw and did during those years. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10. juli 202616 min
episode Mega Edition: Prince Andrew And The Royal Dressing Down At Balmoral By Mummy (7/10/26) cover

Mega Edition: Prince Andrew And The Royal Dressing Down At Balmoral By Mummy (7/10/26)

Prince Andrew’s bond with Queen Elizabeth II was always treated as one of the great protected relationships inside the House of Windsor. He was widely described as her favorite child, and even as the Epstein scandal shredded his public standing, the Queen repeatedly appeared reluctant to fully cast him out. Reporting has described her standing by him after his disastrous 2019 BBC Newsnight interview, allowing him to step back from duties rather than immediately stripping him of everything, and later permitting him to remain Duke of York and a prince while the scandal continued to metastasize. Even in 2022, after Andrew had settled Virginia Giuffre’s civil case without admitting liability, the Queen chose him to escort her into Prince Philip’s memorial service — a public gesture that was widely read as motherly protection at the exact moment the institution should have been running from him. That “special relationship” is what made the Balmoral episode so revealing. In September 2020, Queen Elizabeth reportedly summoned Andrew to Balmoral for crisis talks over Jeffrey Epstein, with Andrew leaving Windsor for the Scottish Highlands to brief his mother after another summer of damaging revelations. The reports said the Queen wanted to be kept informed, that “so much” had come out, and that Andrew’s Epstein ties — including Virginia Giuffre’s allegations, his catastrophic BBC explanations, and his alleged lack of cooperation with U.S. investigators — were still poisoning the monarchy. The image is damning: not a disgraced royal facing full institutional accountability, but a protected son being called in for a private family reckoning with “mummy” at Balmoral. And that has always been the central problem with Andrew — the scandal was never just about his relationship with Epstein; it was about how long royal privilege softened the consequences. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10. juli 202644 min
episode Mega Edition: How Prince Andrew Passed The Buck When it Comes To His Settlement With Virginia (7/10/26) cover

Mega Edition: How Prince Andrew Passed The Buck When it Comes To His Settlement With Virginia (7/10/26)

Queen Elizabeth’s role in Prince Andrew’s settlement with Virginia Giuffre was never formally laid out in court, because the financial terms were sealed, but reporting at the time said she helped Andrew get the deal done. The settlement, announced in February 2022, ended Giuffre’s civil sexual-abuse lawsuit against Andrew without any admission of liability, and it included a “substantial donation” to Giuffre’s charity. Multiple reports put the overall figure around £12 million, with some reporting that the Queen contributed money toward the settlement or the charity portion of it. That matters because it reinforced the perception that Andrew was not simply a disgraced man trying to resolve his own legal exposure; he was still being cushioned by the institution around him, and by a mother who had protected him for decades. Even after Andrew lost his military titles and royal patronages, the image left behind was unmistakable: the monarchy had cut him loose publicly, but the family was still helping clean up the wreckage privately. Then-Prince Charles’s role was more complicated and more political. He was widely reported to have been central to the internal royal push to remove Andrew from public life, strip him of official duties, and prevent the Epstein scandal from dragging the monarchy into the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee year. In that sense, Charles was not acting like Andrew’s rescuer in public; he was acting like the future king trying to contain a reputational catastrophe before it swallowed the institution. Later reporting has disputed or denied claims that Charles personally contributed to the settlement money, including a 2026 denial from a source close to King Charles that he helped fund the payout. But whether he paid into it or not, Charles’s institutional role was clear: Andrew had become radioactive, the case had to be settled before depositions and discovery did more damage, and the monarchy needed the scandal shut down before it reached deeper into the palace machinery. The settlement protected Andrew from trial, but it also protected the Crown from the spectacle of a prince being dragged through open court over Jeffrey Epstein. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10. juli 202646 min
episode Mega Edition: The Epstein OIG Reports Were Meant To Set The Record Straight. They Failed (7/9/26) cover

Mega Edition: The Epstein OIG Reports Were Meant To Set The Record Straight. They Failed (7/9/26)

The OIG/DOJ reviews into Jeffrey Epstein’s death and the sweetheart non-prosecution agreement gave the public a mountain of procedure, but not the kind of definitive answers the case demanded. On Epstein’s death, the OIG documented serious and undeniable failures at MCC New York: Epstein was left without the cellmate he was supposed to have, required rounds and counts were not done, records were falsified, his cell was not properly searched, and the camera system around the SHU was riddled with failures that left investigators with limited recorded video evidence. The report still accepted the broader conclusion that there was no criminality connected to how Epstein died, but that conclusion rested on a broken record: missing video, falsified paperwork, asleep or negligent guards, institutional chaos, and interviews with people who had every reason to protect themselves. The problem is not that the OIG found no failures; it found plenty. The problem is that the most important questions were filtered through the least reliable environment imaginable — a jail unit full of misconduct, self-preservation, memory holes, and conveniently useless answers. The same weakness hangs over the review of the Epstein NPA. The DOJ’s Office of Professional Responsibility concluded that Alex Acosta showed “poor judgment” and resolved the federal investigation before key investigative steps were completed, but it stopped short of the kind of institutional reckoning the deal deserved. That matters because the NPA was not some ordinary plea agreement; it ended a federal sex-crimes investigation, shielded Epstein’s alleged co-conspirators, kept victims in the dark, and became the central symbol of how power protected Epstein when the government had him dead to rights. The later transcripts and testimony only sharpen the point: when officials and insiders were pressed on what happened, the answers too often collapsed into “I don’t recall,” “I don’t know,” “I can’t speak to that,” and other forms of bureaucratic fog. That is not a reliable foundation for closure. It is the sound of a system investigating itself after the witnesses, lawyers, prosecutors, jail staff, and decision-makers had already learned that the safest answer in the Epstein universe was not the truth — it was amnesia. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

10. juli 202651 min
episode How the FBI Spent Nearly a Million Dollars to “Accidentally” Expose Epstein’s Victims cover

How the FBI Spent Nearly a Million Dollars to “Accidentally” Expose Epstein’s Victims

Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein — through their lawyers — have strongly condemned the recent release of documents by U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) that left dozens of their names unredacted. Their attorneys argue that this is not just negligence, but a gross violation of their dignity and privacy: “These women are not political pawns,” the filing reads, emphasizing that many of the victims are “mothers, wives, and daughters,” and that exposing their identities without consent — especially when some were minors at the time of abuse — re-victimizes them and undermines any promise of protection. Moreover, the lawyers warn that the scope of the oversight failure suggests the DOJ “either does not know the identities of all the victims … and thus cannot apply proper redactions,” or is “intentionally failing to protect victims from public exposure.” They’re pressing a federal judge to demand a more robust redaction process — including asking the DOJ for a full list of known victims so they can ensure no one else is inadvertently exposed. to  contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Law firm representing alleged Epstein victims sends scathing letter over DOJ document release - ABC News [https://abcnews.go.com/US/epstein-alleged-victims-lawyer-sends-scathing-letter-doj/story?id=127907683]

10. juli 202618 min