

The Vault: The Epstein Files
Bobby Capucci
The Vault: The Epstein Files Unsealed is a deep-dive investigative podcast that pulls back the curtain on one of the most protected criminal networks in modern history. This series is built from the ground up on the actual paper trail—unsealed court records, depositions, exhibits, emails, and filings that were never meant to be read by the public. No pundit panels. No spin. Just the documents themselves, examined line by line, name by name, connection by connection—paired with precise, document-driven analysis that explains what the record truly shows.Each episode opens the vault on newly unsealed or long-buried Epstein files and walks listeners through what they actually reveal about power, money, influence, and the systems that failed survivors at every turn. Alongside the filings themselves, informed commentary breaks down the legal strategy, the institutional behavior, the contradictions, and the implications hiding between the lines. From judges’ orders and sealed exhibits to sworn testimony and back-channel communications, the show connects the dots the media often won’t—or can’t. Patterns emerge. Timelines collapse. Excuses fall apart.The Vault is a working archive in audio form, a living record of the Epstein case as told by the courts themselves—supplemented by rigorous analysis that provides context, challenges official narratives, and exposes where the record has been distorted, sanitized, or deliberately ignored. Every claim is grounded in filings. Every episode is anchored to the record. Listeners aren’t told what to think—they are shown what exists, what was said under oath, and what the commentary reveals about how those facts were buried, softened, or misrepresented.If you want to understand how Jeffrey Epstein was protected, who circled him, how institutions closed ranks, and why accountability keeps slipping through the cracks, The Vault: The Epstein Files Unsealed is where the record finally speaks for itself—and where the commentary ensures the documents do what no press release ever will.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 4, 2026 • 14min
Jeffrey Epstein And The Girls With No Names (Part 3) (3/4/26)
A deep dive into how silence was used as a tool to hide abuse. Stories of vulnerable girls lured with false promises and then erased through travel, confiscated documents, and isolation. Examination of recruitment networks, institutional complicity, and cultural shame that kept victims invisible. A focus on the many nameless voices whose absence itself speaks to the scale of the crimes.

Mar 4, 2026 • 12min
Jeffrey Epstein And The Girls With No Names (Part 2) (3/4/26)
A deep look at how a calculated partnership and the modeling industry were used to recruit and trap vulnerable girls. Explores cultural shame, confiscated passports, language barriers and jurisdictional gaps that erased identities. Focuses on psychological grooming, economic pressure and the deliberate architecture of silence that kept many victims nameless.

Mar 4, 2026 • 12min
Jeffrey Epstein And The Girls With No Names (Part 1) (3/4/26)
Investigates how silence was used as a weapon to keep vulnerable girls from Eastern Europe and South America invisible. Explores recruitment schemes promising modeling, work, or education that led to passport seizure and entrapment. Examines how properties and travel became controlled spaces for exploitation and how stigma and legal anonymity erase victims.

Mar 4, 2026 • 13min
Epstein’s Crimes Reached Central and South America But Media Coverage Rarely Followed (3/4/26)
Investigators trace a structured pipeline that funneled vulnerable girls from Peru, Brazil and other Latin American countries into international trafficking rings. Testimony reveals abuse occurring on-site in Peru and repeated recruitment tactics mirroring operations in Eastern Europe. The discussion highlights institutional enabling across airlines, agencies and financial systems and the vast, overlooked scale of harm in Central and South America.

Mar 4, 2026 • 15min
Bear Stearns and the Birth of Epstein’s Financial Myth (3/3/26)
A look at how Epstein slipped into Bear Stearns without a degree and rose far beyond his qualifications. Discussion of his resume fraud and why leadership allowed it to continue. Exploration of alleged misconduct at the firm and unanswered questions about his departure. Analysis of how he used that brief Wall Street pedigree to build credibility and attract ultra-wealthy clients.

Mar 4, 2026 • 13min
MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 5) (3/3/26)
Michael Thomas, a veteran Metropolitan Correctional Center correctional officer who testified in probes of Jeffrey Epstein’s death. He discusses not reviewing the hot list, awareness that Epstein was a suicide risk, rules about assigning cellmates, communication and notification procedures, and why he did not report the missing cellmate during his shift.

Mar 4, 2026 • 16min
MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 4) (3/3/26)
Michael Thomas, a veteran federal correctional officer at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, recalls his role and memories of monitoring Jeffrey Epstein in the Special Housing Unit. He discusses cellmate changes, a July incident involving Nicholas Tartaglione, procedures like suicide observation and the hot list, and details about the August 9–10 overnight shift and rounds that night.

Mar 4, 2026 • 13min
MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 3) (3/3/26)
A deep dive into the timeline and overnight duties surrounding a high-profile inmate's death. The conversation focuses on shift logs, missed rounds, and what staff were supposed to do in the Special Housing Unit. Training, medical response readiness, and confusion over cellmate and monitoring policies are also examined.

Mar 4, 2026 • 14min
MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 2) (3/3/26)
A deep dive into the OIG interview of an MCC corrections officer involved in the night Jeffrey Epstein died. The conversation covers training, post orders, and how SHU rounds and counts are supposed to work. It explores staffing, procedural gaps, and the record-keeping that became central to investigations.

Mar 3, 2026 • 14min
MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 1) (3/3/26)
Michael Thomas, a veteran Federal Bureau of Prisons correctional officer who worked the Metropolitan Correctional Center SHU, discusses his OIG interview about the night Jeffrey Epstein died. He talks about the scope of the investigation, alleged failures to perform required rounds and counts, the procedural and staffing issues at the jail, and the formal interview process under oath.


