Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And His Favorite Pilot (3/9/26)
Mar 10, 2026
A tense courtroom recap focused on the pilot who ran Epstein’s flight network and the high-profile figures who traveled on those planes. Testimony about grooming at elite institutions and travel to private properties takes center stage. The show digs into credibility battles, cross-examination tactics, and how logistical support may have enabled abuse.
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Pilot As Logistics Hub For Epstein
Larry Vysosky functioned as the logistics hub for Epstein, coordinating flights that moved guests, staff, and young women between properties.
Vysosky named high-profile passengers like Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, Prince Andrew, and Itzhak Perlman, showing how travel enabled access across Epstein's network.
insights INSIGHT
Using Pilot's Trust To Humanize Maxwell
The defense tried to build credibility for Ghislaine Maxwell by highlighting Vysosky's personal trust, including letting Maxwell ride horses with his daughters.
That exchange framed Maxwell as respectable to counter survivor testimony and undermine allegations.
question_answer ANECDOTE
Interlochen Introduction And Early Grooming
Jane Doe recounted meeting Epstein and Maxwell at Interlochen when she was 14 and being given her mother's landline number by them.
She described topless women at the pool and early grooming through gifts like voice lessons and clothes.
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Larry Visoski was Jeffrey Epstein’s longtime pilot and aviation manager, a man who spent decades flying Epstein across the globe while overseeing the logistics of the financier’s private aviation empire. Visoski operated the aircraft that became infamous in connection with Epstein’s activities—flying routes between New York, Palm Beach, the U.S. Virgin Islands, New Mexico, and Europe. As the pilot responsible for coordinating flights, manifests, and passenger movements, Visoski was positioned at the operational center of Epstein’s travel network. His job was not limited to sitting in the cockpit; he managed flight operations, worked closely with Epstein’s inner circle, and facilitated the movement of a steady stream of passengers to Epstein’s various properties. That proximity meant Visoski had a front-row seat to the constant flow of powerful guests, staff members, and young women who moved through Epstein’s orbit during the years when allegations of abuse were mounting. In practical terms, Visoski was one of the key logistical gatekeepers of Epstein’s lifestyle, helping sustain the infrastructure that allowed Epstein to shuttle people between properties with remarkable ease.
Visoski has consistently portrayed himself as little more than a professional pilot who kept his head down and focused on flying the plane, but that explanation has drawn skepticism from many observers who find it implausible that someone so embedded in Epstein’s operations could have remained oblivious to what was happening around him. The pilot spent years transporting Epstein and his entourage to the very locations where abuse was later alleged to have taken place, and he maintained the aircraft that served as the connective tissue between Epstein’s homes and social network. Critics argue that this role placed Visoski in a position where ignorance becomes difficult to reconcile with the scale and duration of the operation. While Visoski has never been charged with a crime, the idea that a central logistical figure in Epstein’s travel apparatus somehow noticed nothing unusual has been widely viewed as a convenient narrative rather than a persuasive one. For many examining Epstein’s network, Visoski represents a broader problem in the scandal: the number of insiders who were close enough to the machinery of Epstein’s world to keep it running, yet who later insisted they saw nothing that raised alarms.