The Vault: The Epstein Files

Bobby Capucci
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Apr 4, 2026 • 38min

Mega Edition: Stacey Plaskett Calls The Epstein Related Lawsuit Filed Against Her Frivolous (4/4/26)

Stacey Plaskett, the U.S. Virgin Islands delegate to the U.S. House, has called the civil lawsuit filed against her by six survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s trafficking scheme “frivolous.” In her motion seeking sanctions against the plaintiffs’ attorney, she described the accusations as “outright untruth, fiction and misrepresentation,” stating the attorney persisted with what she characterized as unfounded claims even after her legal team warned that continuing would trigger a Rule 11 motion.The lawsuit, originally filed in November 2023 and amended twice, alleged that Plaskett and other U.S. Virgin Islands officials helped facilitate Epstein’s trafficking operations, including through tax-break programs, fundraising, and other support.   Plaskett denied all the allegations, and by August 2025 the case against her alone was voluntarily dismissed with prejudice, meaning it cannot be refiled.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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Apr 4, 2026 • 29min

Mega Edition: Former USVI First Lady Cecile De Jongh And Her Buddy Jeffrey Epstein (4/4/26)

Cecile de Jongh, former First Lady of the U.S. Virgin Islands, admitted in court filings that she stayed at Jeffrey Epstein’s Manhattan apartment in 2017 while undergoing knee-replacement surgery. According to the reporting, she explained the stay as a matter of convenience because the apartment offered an elevator and close proximity to the hospital. However, the acknowledgment has intensified scrutiny over the long-standing relationship between Epstein and political leadership in the Virgin Islands, raising questions about the nature and depth of the ties between Epstein and the territory’s most influential public figures.The stay is part of a broader pattern documented in lawsuits and financial records that show de Jongh maintained an extensive working relationship with Epstein for years, including serving as a key facilitator for his business and political interests in the Virgin Islands while her husband was governor. She has been accused in court filings of acting as a conduit for Epstein’s influence over legislation, helping secure visas for young women associated with him, and requesting tuition support for her children. These details further fuel allegations that Virgin Islands officials not only tolerated Epstein’s presence but actively helped maintain the conditions that allowed him to operate unchecked for decades.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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Apr 4, 2026 • 44min

Mega Edition: The Oddities Surrounding Jeffrey Epstein's Death (Part 3) (4/4/26)

​In the days leading up to his death, Jeffrey Epstein exhibited a complex and seemingly contradictory state of mind. Despite facing serious charges and the prospect of a prolonged prison sentence, Epstein reportedly denied having suicidal thoughts and appeared confident about his situation. He described his life as "wonderful" and expressed no intention of self-harm, even while under suicide watch.   So, how did he end up dead?Following Jeffrey Epstein’s highly suspicious death in August 2019, Attorney General William Barr became the subject of intense scrutiny, with many alleging he played a role in a cover-up to protect powerful individuals linked to Epstein. As the head of the Justice Department, Barr oversaw the Bureau of Prisons, which was responsible for Epstein’s detention at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC). Critics questioned how such a high-profile inmate, who had reportedly been on suicide watch just days prior, was able to die under such dubious circumstances, including the alleged malfunctioning of security cameras and the guards' failure to conduct routine checks. The rapid declaration of suicide as the official cause of death, despite forensic inconsistencies such as Epstein’s hyoid bone fracture—a common indicator of strangulation—led to widespread skepticism. Given Barr’s history, including his father’s connection to Epstein through hiring him at the Dalton School, and his prior role in minimizing scrutiny over elite figures, suspicions grew that his Justice Department deliberately mishandled the investigation to suppress damaging revelations.In response to these allegations, Barr publicly condemned the failures at MCC, calling them a “perfect storm of screw-ups” rather than an orchestrated cover-up. He ordered internal investigations by the FBI and the Justice Department’s Inspector General, which ultimately upheld the suicide ruling. However, many found Barr’s explanation unconvincing, particularly given his previous role in facilitating leniency for powerful figures in legal matters. His insistence that Epstein’s death was a result of incompetence rather than conspiracy did little to quell speculation, especially as key evidence, such as security footage, was either missing or unusable. Some critics pointed to the swift dismissal of the guards involved as a means to close the case without deeper scrutiny. Barr’s handling of the case remains a subject of controversy, with many believing that his role was not just oversight but active damage control to protect Epstein’s powerful associates from exposure.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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Apr 4, 2026 • 37min

Mega Edition: The Oddities Surrounding Jeffrey Epstein's Death (Part 2) (4/4/26)

Jeffrey Epstein was reportedly terrified of his former cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, a former police officer facing charges for multiple murders. Epstein’s fear stemmed from an alleged violent encounter between the two while they were housed together at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in New York. Shortly before Epstein’s first apparent suicide attempt in July 2019, he was found injured in his cell, and he reportedly accused Tartaglione of assaulting him. However, Tartaglione denied any involvement, claiming that he had actually tried to help Epstein and refuted allegations that he had harmed him. Given Tartaglione’s background—charged with killing four men in a drug-related crime—Epstein’s fear of him fueled speculation that his life was in danger behind bars, adding to the broader concerns and theories surrounding his eventual death.​Documents obtained by the Associated Press under the Freedom of Information Act reveal detailed insights into Jeffrey Epstein's final days at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) before his death in August 2019. These records indicate that Epstein was increasingly distressed, experiencing difficulty sleeping, and expressing fears about his safety within the facility. Despite a prior suicide attempt, he was removed from suicide watch and placed in a regular cell, a decision now scrutinized for its appropriateness. The documents also highlight significant lapses in protocol, including guards failing to perform routine checks and falsifying records to cover their negligence. Additionally, there were reports of malfunctioning surveillance cameras outside Epstein's cell, further complicating the circumstances surrounding his death. These revelations have intensified public skepticism and fueled ongoing debates about the adequacy of the measures taken to prevent Epstein's suicide.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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Apr 4, 2026 • 33min

Mega Edition: The Oddities Surrounding Jeffrey Epstein's Death (Part 1) (4/3/26)

The two guards on duty at the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) the night Jeffrey Epstein died, Tova Noel and Michael Thomas, claimed to have fallen asleep and failed to check on him for several hours, despite being required to conduct routine checks every 30 minutes. Instead, they falsified records to cover up their negligence, leading to widespread speculation about whether their inaction was due to incompetence or something more sinister. Adding to the controversy, the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) report from the scene raised further doubts, as first responders reportedly found Epstein in a condition inconsistent with immediate resuscitation efforts, with rigor mortis already setting in, suggesting he had been dead for longer than officially stated. The conflicting accounts, missing surveillance footage, and the guards' suspicious behavior have fueled theories that Epstein’s death was not simply a suicide, but rather a silencing operation orchestrated to protect powerful individuals implicated in his crimes.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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Apr 4, 2026 • 12min

The USVI And Their Demand For A Trial Against The Jeffrey Epstein Estate (Part 2) (4/3/26)

The U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) has filed a lawsuit against the estate of Jeffrey Epstein, seeking accountability for the alleged crimes he committed while residing on his private islands within the territory. The USVI government accuses Epstein’s estate of benefiting from the human trafficking and sexual abuse of young women and girls, which he orchestrated and concealed through a network of companies and associates. In addition to financial restitution, the USVI is demanding transparency and structural changes to prevent future exploitation, emphasizing their jurisdiction's critical role in investigating Epstein’s operations and protecting victims.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmal.com
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Apr 4, 2026 • 11min

The USVI And Their Demand For A Trial Against The Jeffrey Epstein Estate (Part 1) (4/3/26)

The U.S. Virgin Islands (USVI) has filed a lawsuit against the estate of Jeffrey Epstein, seeking accountability for the alleged crimes he committed while residing on his private islands within the territory. The USVI government accuses Epstein’s estate of benefiting from the human trafficking and sexual abuse of young women and girls, which he orchestrated and concealed through a network of companies and associates. In addition to financial restitution, the USVI is demanding transparency and structural changes to prevent future exploitation, emphasizing their jurisdiction's critical role in investigating Epstein’s operations and protecting victims.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmal.com
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Apr 4, 2026 • 15min

Ghislaine Maxwell's DOJ Interview: No Names, No Justice, No Surprise (4/3/26)

The Department of Justice’s release of the Ghislaine Maxwell transcripts is nothing but theater—a sham staged to protect the powerful and slam the door shut on the Epstein saga. Maxwell, a convicted trafficker, was granted immunity and a microphone to mock survivors, erase the notion of a client list, and cast doubt on Epstein’s death, all while the DOJ used her denials as a shield. The scandal isn’t that these transcripts were released—it’s that the interview happened at all, that the government legitimized a predator’s voice and tried to use it as “closure” for the most explosive trafficking scandal of our time.But this isn’t closure—it’s desperation. They want the public exhausted, numb, and willing to accept Maxwell’s lies as the final word. Yet those who’ve been in the trenches since the beginning know better. This doesn’t end because she says it ends. Every denial and every carefully managed release only proves the cover-up is alive, the names are still hidden, and the truth is still too dangerous to reveal. The DOJ can trot out Maxwell as their mouthpiece, but it won’t work—this fight isn’t over, and when the reckoning comes, it won’t be Maxwell or the elites doing the laughing.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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Apr 3, 2026 • 15min

Nobody’s Girl, Everybody’s Crime: Virginia Robert's And The Trauma That Haunted Her (4/3/26)

In Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, Virginia Giuffre opens up about the full, unrelenting scope of her trauma — the kind that doesn’t fade with time or distance. She writes about how, for years after escaping Jeffrey Epstein’s orbit, the abuse followed her in the form of brutal, recurring nightmares. These dreams, she says, weren’t abstract or distant; they were graphic replays of the hell she endured. In them, she relives the moments of being trapped and powerless — “greedy, heaving men on top of me,” as she describes in one passage — faces of powerful men she says she could never forget no matter how much therapy or time passed. These weren’t just faceless monsters in her dreams, but the same influential figures who smiled for cameras by day and committed atrocities behind closed doors. Each nightmare pulled her back into that same room, that same suffocating darkness, where her voice was taken and her body wasn’t hers to protect.Giuffre writes that even as she built a life beyond Epstein, married, and became a mother, the shadows of her past crept into every quiet moment. The nightmares would come without warning, often triggered by a sound, a smell, or a fleeting image — and they would leave her in tears, shaking and gasping for air. In Nobody’s Girl, she describes waking up drenched in sweat, her heart pounding, the faces of her abusers flashing before her eyes. The emotional toll was relentless: feelings of shame, self-blame, and fear blended into a kind of nightly punishment for crimes she never committed. Through therapy, advocacy, and confronting her past publicly, she began to reclaim fragments of peace — but even then, she admits that healing isn’t clean or complete. Her nightmares became both a curse and a reminder: a symbol of the damage inflicted not just by Epstein and Maxwell, but by the entire system of enablers who let it happen.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:Prince Andrew accuser Virginia Giuffre claimed she was haunted by images of 'greedy, heaving men' who abused her
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Apr 3, 2026 • 14min

How Epstein’s Shadow Is Reshaping Donor Legacy on College Campuses (4/3/26)

What’s unfolding around Les Wexner’s name on college campuses isn’t just a debate—it’s a long-overdue reckoning with how wealth has been used to buy prestige, silence, and institutional protection. Universities didn’t just accept donations, they traded credibility for them, elevating donors into untouchable figures while avoiding scrutiny of their backgrounds and associations. The Epstein scandal shattered that arrangement by exposing how deeply intertwined powerful donors were with a system that prioritized money over accountability. Now, the public is no longer willing to separate philanthropy from the person behind it, and the continued honoring of names like Wexner’s is being seen not as neutral, but as an active endorsement of a deeply compromised legacy.The demand to remove those names is not radical—it is the bare minimum of accountability, and the resistance to doing so reveals exactly where institutional priorities lie. Universities are stalling not because the issue is unclear, but because they fear the consequences of disrupting a donor-driven system that has long benefited them. Claims that the situation is “complicated” are little more than excuses to delay action that should have already been taken. At its core, this moment is about whether institutions will continue protecting their past decisions or finally align their actions with the values they claim to uphold. The public’s patience is gone, and anything short of decisive action will only deepen the perception that these institutions value money over truth.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

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