The Vault: The Epstein Files

Mega Edition: The Sarah Ransome Deposition From The Maxwell/Virginia Roberts Lawsuit (Part 11-13) (5/27/26)

48 min · 28 mei 2026
aflevering Mega Edition: The Sarah Ransome Deposition From The Maxwell/Virginia Roberts Lawsuit (Part 11-13) (5/27/26) cover

Beschrijving

Sarah Ransome’s deposition offers a disturbing account of her exploitation by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. She described being lured to New York under false pretenses and quickly forced into a world of manipulation and abuse. Ransome testified to being coerced into group sexual acts, including one incident involving a well-known attorney. She recounted life on Epstein’s private island and inside his New York mansion as being tightly controlled and openly sexual, where young women were “lent out” to powerful men and Maxwell ran the properties like a brothel. She spoke of being subjected to weight demands, emotionally broken down, and even attempting to escape by swimming away—only to be caught and returned. Ransome also claimed Epstein kept extensive flight logs, took photos and videos of sexual encounters, and may have used them as leverage over high-profile associates. However, her credibility was later challenged after she sent emails alleging the existence of sex tapes involving major political and business figures—claims she later admitted were fabricated in a desperate attempt to draw attention to her situation. She expressed remorse for those statements and acknowledged that they were false. Still, her deposition remains one of the most revealing inside views of how Epstein’s trafficking operation functioned—highlighting both the calculated cruelty of the system and the lasting psychological toll it inflicted on its victims. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: DE 701-1 — Sarah Ransome depo - DocumentCloud [https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/23453527-de-701-1-sarah-ransome-depo]

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aflevering Jeffrey Epstein, The Gambino Crime Family and....Ninjas? artwork

Jeffrey Epstein, The Gambino Crime Family and....Ninjas?

Jeffrey Epstein allegedly told authorities that while he was on house arrest in Florida, his security team caught a man dressed in black “like a ninja” hiding in bushes near him. According to documents later obtained from the Epstein prosecution record, Epstein’s attorney Jack Goldberger raised the incident in a letter while seeking changes to Epstein’s probation restrictions. Goldberger claimed Epstein’s security chased the man back to his vehicle, recorded his license plate information, and later concluded that the man had alleged links to the Gambino crime family. The whole thing reads like one of the stranger corners of the Epstein record: a convicted sex offender, under supervision, claiming he was being watched or stalked by a mafia-linked figure dressed in stealth gear. The key point is that prosecutors apparently did not treat the claim as some major verified mob conspiracy, and there is no public proof that the “ninja” episode was exactly what Epstein and his lawyer described. It may have been a genuine security scare, an exaggerated attempt to loosen his probation conditions, or another bizarre episode in Epstein’s long habit of surrounding himself with paranoia, private security, and dramatic claims about threats around him. Still, the allegation matters because it shows how strange and theatrical Epstein’s legal world could become: even while serving sweetheart-deal punishment, he was still trying to shape the terms of his confinement, presenting himself as a target rather than focusing on the victims and the criminal conduct that put him under supervision in the first place. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

28 mei 202611 min
aflevering From Donor Lodge to Demolition Site: Interlochen’s Epstein Problem (5/28/26) artwork

From Donor Lodge to Demolition Site: Interlochen’s Epstein Problem (5/28/26)

Interlochen Center for the Arts is moving to demolish Green Lake Lodge, a building originally funded by Jeffrey Epstein and once named for him before the school stripped his name from campus after learning of his 2009 criminal conviction. Epstein had attended Interlochen’s summer camp in 1967 and later donated to the institution from 1990 to 2003. The lodge, built along Green Lake, was used to house donors and, at times, Epstein himself. Interlochen says it previously investigated his activities on campus after his first conviction and again after his 2019 arrest, claiming it found no evidence that Epstein committed crimes at the school. Still, the building has become impossible for the institution to separate from Epstein’s legacy, and Interlochen’s board says demolishing it is now the appropriate step. The renewed scrutiny comes after recently released Justice Department files and prior reporting showed Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell met alone with at least one student at the lodge, an encounter the woman later described as the beginning of grooming behavior. Interlochen says it does not allow unsupervised donor-student visits, but that claim only raises more questions about how Epstein and Maxwell ended up alone with a student in the first place. Michigan lawmakers have signaled plans to investigate Epstein’s activities at Interlochen, while the school says it has cooperated with investigators and will respond to oversight bodies as needed. The demolition may remove the physical structure, but it does not erase the larger issue: Epstein was embedded deeply enough in elite institutions that even a children’s arts camp in northern Michigan became part of the long, ugly paper trail. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Interlochen to demolish lodge tied to Jeffrey Epstein | News | abc12.com [https://www.abc12.com/news/interlochen-to-demolish-lodge-tied-to-jeffrey-epstein/article_5871d225-10f8-4989-a0e2-75c2fbf7751f.html#google_vignette]

28 mei 202611 min
aflevering The Political Machine Cheers While the Epstein Questions Remain (5/28/26) artwork

The Political Machine Cheers While the Epstein Questions Remain (5/28/26)

The column argues that Thomas Massie’s primary defeat is not just a political loss but the symbolic collapse of what it calls the “Epstein Era,” meaning the period when Epstein-related transparency demands, online speculation, anti-establishment anger, and accusations about hidden networks became central to parts of Republican politics. Its basic claim is that Massie helped drag the party into a conspiracy swamp by pushing the Epstein Files Transparency Act with Ro Khanna, amplifying suspicion around sealed records, and giving oxygen to claims the writer treats as paranoia rather than legitimate oversight. The column frames Massie’s loss to Trump-backed Ed Gallrein as voters finally rejecting that politics of suspicion, and it lumps Massie together with figures like Marjorie Taylor Greene and Tucker Carlson as people who allegedly used Epstein to fuel distrust, grievance, and ideological chaos. But taken skeptically, the whole argument feels very convenient. Calling Massie’s defeat the “end” of the Epstein era is a huge stretch, because Epstein did not become a major public issue because of Thomas Massie; he became one because of a real federal sweetheart deal, real victims, real institutional failures, real sealed records, real elite associations, and years of DOJ opacity. The column tries to convert a transparency fight into a conspiracy problem, which is a neat little rhetorical trick: once demands for records are branded as fever-swamp politics, the people asking for documents become the story instead of the documents themselves. Massie’s bill passed the House 427–1, which makes it hard to pretend this was some fringe personal crusade rather than a politically explosive transparency issue with overwhelming bipartisan support. His defeat may show Trump’s power inside a GOP primary, but it does not prove the Epstein questions are over, and it sure as hell does not erase the underlying reason people still want the files: the official story has never earned the level of trust its defenders keep demanding. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: Thomas Massie's defeat brings the Epstein Era to a humiliating end [https://nypost.com/2026/05/25/opinion/thomas-massies-defeat-brings-the-epstein-era-to-a-humiliating-end/]

28 mei 202616 min
aflevering Jeffrey Epstein and the Latin American Power Brokers Around His Network (Part 2) (5/28/26) artwork

Jeffrey Epstein and the Latin American Power Brokers Around His Network (Part 2) (5/28/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s reach extended far beyond New York, Palm Beach, and the familiar circles of American finance and politics. Newly surfaced records show him probing for influence and opportunity across Latin America and the Caribbean, including Venezuela and Cuba, where he appeared to position himself as a connector for businessmen, political insiders, and power brokers operating in difficult, sensitive, or sanctions-adjacent environments. One major thread involves Epstein advising DP World’s Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem after Hugo Chávez nationalized Venezuelan ports, with Epstein suggesting Cuba as a possible backchannel route into Caracas. Another involves Venezuelan businessman Francisco D’Agostino and discussions about potential oil opportunities connected to PDVSA and the Orinoco River oil fields. D’Agostino says the proposed Venezuela trip never happened and no deal came together, but the records still show Epstein attempting to place himself near the intersection of energy, politics, and elite access. The Cuba material follows the same pattern. Epstein traveled there in 2003 with Ghislaine Maxwell and former Colombian president Andrés Pastrana, and Maxwell later claimed they met Fidel Castro, though there is no clear evidence that Epstein conducted business or political negotiations with Castro. Years later, Epstein funded a Cuban state-backed neuroscience conference in Havana through his connection to researcher Gino Yu, fitting his larger pattern of using science, academia, and intellectual circles as a legitimacy machine. The larger takeaway is not that every one of Epstein’s approaches produced a successful deal; many appear to have stalled or gone nowhere. The real significance is that a convicted sex offender with a history of elite protection was still moving through circles connected to foreign governments, oil wealth, port infrastructure, sanctioned economies, and high-level intermediaries, raising the same old question: who kept allowing this man access to rooms where he clearly did not belong? to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: How Epstein explored Venezuelan deals, funded Cuban research | Miami Herald [https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/article315447900.html]

28 mei 202612 min
aflevering Jeffrey Epstein and the Latin American Power Brokers Around His Network (Part 1) (5/28/26) artwork

Jeffrey Epstein and the Latin American Power Brokers Around His Network (Part 1) (5/28/26)

Jeffrey Epstein’s reach extended far beyond New York, Palm Beach, and the familiar circles of American finance and politics. Newly surfaced records show him probing for influence and opportunity across Latin America and the Caribbean, including Venezuela and Cuba, where he appeared to position himself as a connector for businessmen, political insiders, and power brokers operating in difficult, sensitive, or sanctions-adjacent environments. One major thread involves Epstein advising DP World’s Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem after Hugo Chávez nationalized Venezuelan ports, with Epstein suggesting Cuba as a possible backchannel route into Caracas. Another involves Venezuelan businessman Francisco D’Agostino and discussions about potential oil opportunities connected to PDVSA and the Orinoco River oil fields. D’Agostino says the proposed Venezuela trip never happened and no deal came together, but the records still show Epstein attempting to place himself near the intersection of energy, politics, and elite access. The Cuba material follows the same pattern. Epstein traveled there in 2003 with Ghislaine Maxwell and former Colombian president Andrés Pastrana, and Maxwell later claimed they met Fidel Castro, though there is no clear evidence that Epstein conducted business or political negotiations with Castro. Years later, Epstein funded a Cuban state-backed neuroscience conference in Havana through his connection to researcher Gino Yu, fitting his larger pattern of using science, academia, and intellectual circles as a legitimacy machine. The larger takeaway is not that every one of Epstein’s approaches produced a successful deal; many appear to have stalled or gone nowhere. The real significance is that a convicted sex offender with a history of elite protection was still moving through circles connected to foreign governments, oil wealth, port infrastructure, sanctioned economies, and high-level intermediaries, raising the same old question: who kept allowing this man access to rooms where he clearly did not belong? to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: How Epstein explored Venezuelan deals, funded Cuban research | Miami Herald [https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/article315447900.html]

28 mei 202613 min