
The Vault: The Epstein Files The Honey Trap Theory: Ari Ben-Menashe Speaks on Epstein (Part 2) (3/5/26)
Mar 5, 2026
A former intelligence officer argues Epstein ran a honey‑trap operation using islands, jets, and mansions as controlled surveillance environments. The conversation focuses on kompromat tradecraft, why secrets mattered more than money, and how elite ties and legal leniency could signal protection. Historical links to Robert Maxwell and the theory’s enduring but unverified nature are also discussed.
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Epstein Interpreted As Honey Trap Asset
- Ari Ben-Menashe frames Epstein as an intelligence asset rather than just a wealthy predator.
- He argues private properties, controlled environments, and young women match classic honey-trap tradecraft used to gather kompromat.
Secrets Over Money As Epstein's True Currency
- Ben-Menashe says the value of Epstein's operation was information and leverage, not just money.
- He highlights private jets, mansions, and an island as controlled venues for recording and storing compromising material for later use.
Legal Leniency Seen As Protection For An Asset
- Ben-Menashe links Epstein's long legal leniency to his alleged usefulness to agencies.
- He points to the 2008 non-prosecution deal and officials' hesitancy as signs Epstein may have been protected to avoid exposing networks.
