

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 3, 2026 • 11min
The Epstein Co-Conspirator Controversy Is Really About the Cover-Up (3/3/26)
Discussion of long-documented names now being treated as breaking news. Critique of legacy media reframing old records without context. Warning that repackaging facts fuels speculation and distracts from provable evidence. Examination of Department of Justice conduct and how institutional evasions sustained the cover-up. Strategy for sustained documentation and accountability.

Mar 3, 2026 • 11min
Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 10) (3/2/26)
Courtney Wild, a former deposition witness who testified about interactions at Epstein’s Palm Beach home. She recounts being left alone with him, instances of sexual contact, payments for recruiting girls, and seeing other young women brought in. The conversation also touches on Nadia Marcinkova, Sarah Kellen’s presence, and the emotional aftermath Courtney describes.

Mar 3, 2026 • 15min
Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 9) (3/2/26)
Courtney Wild, a former deposition witness who testified about being sexually molested by Jeffrey Epstein and about recruiting others, recalls her background and the events that led her into the case. She discusses recognizing news of Rothstein’s scheme, legal questions about federal suits, her past convictions, memories of abuse beginning at 14, and transporting girls to Epstein’s home.

Mar 3, 2026 • 13min
Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 8) (3/2/26)
A 2017 sworn deposition covers personal background, criminal history, and family struggles. Testimony touches on trips to New York, recruitment of young women, and payments for referrals. Detailed accounts describe interactions at Epstein's home, telephone arrangements, and prior legal statements. The recording also addresses legal representation and recollections from an earlier deposition.

Mar 3, 2026 • 13min
Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 7) (3/1/26)
A 2017 deposition covers identity, past convictions, and credibility under oath. It revisits how she met key figures and the timeline of first encounters. Testimony explores recruitment, accounts of sexual conduct and consent framing. Legal strategy and procedural objections around the CVRA and motives for pursuing justice are also discussed.

Mar 2, 2026 • 13min
Courtney Wild And Her Jeffrey Epstein Related Deposition From 2017 (Part 6) (3/1/26)
A recorded 2017 deposition covers personal background, criminal history, and credibility questions under oath. The conversation examines interactions with FBI and DOJ, meetings at a grocery store, and interview memos used to refresh memory. Topics include the impact of a non‑prosecution agreement, legal representation choices, and questions about drug and underage dancing allegations.

Mar 2, 2026 • 12min
The Filthy Reality of Epstein’s Political Power in the United States Virgin Islands (3/2/26)
A document-driven probe into how wealth and access let a predator entrench himself in U.S. Virgin Islands politics. Records, emails, and bank trails reveal strategic political capture and efforts to rewrite laws for personal benefit. The show examines betrayal by local officials and frames the territory as a prototype of systemic corruption. It warns more hidden ties likely remain.

Mar 2, 2026 • 12min
Crash Out or Kill Shot? Inside Suzie Wiles’ Vanity Fair Leak (3/2/26)
A Vanity Fair leak is unpacked as either a messy crash-out or a precise, targeted strike. Private contempt for key figures clashes with the administration’s public image. The Epstein mishandling is examined as a unifying failure. Theories of strategic scapegoating and an impending internal purge are explored.

Mar 2, 2026 • 12min
Redact and Deny: How the DOJ Is Still Hiding the Truth About Jeffrey Epstein (3/2/26)
The show digs into the DOJ’s widespread and inconsistent redactions in the Epstein file release. It highlights how names of known figures and federal employees were blacked out, obstructing accountability. It argues that excessive secrecy looks like institutional self-protection, not legal caution. It calls for enforcement of transparency laws and public pressure to reveal the full record.

Mar 2, 2026 • 15min
Nadia Marcinkova Revealed as Federal Cooperator in Epstein Investigation (3/2/26)
A deep dive into newly released DOJ files showing a former model-turned-pilot’s cooperation with federal investigators from 2018 to 2022. The conversation highlights immigration leverage, an FBI declaration calling her a trafficking victim, and links to Epstein’s inner circle. Listeners hear about emails suggesting manipulation, alleged recruitment ties, and why she was referenced but never criminally charged.


