Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
What's up everyone, and welcome to another episode of the
Epstein Chronicles. You ever notice how every time something shady
happens with klay Maxwell, the DOJ suddenly forgets how to
speak English. It's like clockwork. They go radio silent faster
than a mob lawyer in a Rico trial. The woman
gets transferred, moved like a pawn off the board, and
(00:23):
nobody in power so much as blinks. No press release,
not a statement, not even one of those phony ongoing
investigation excuses they love to trot out. Just nothing, dead air,
And if they had their way, you'd think Layne Maxwell
never existed, just poof gone, like the evidence, like the accountability,
like the justice we were promised. It's amazing, isn't it.
(00:47):
The DOJ can find time to explain how a woman
convicted of trafficking miners for the global elite ends up
quietly relocated, but they can leak an indictment before your
morning coffee if it's politically useful. These fools have turned
selective silence into a national pastime. It's an art form
at this point, one they've perfected over decades of burying
(01:09):
scandals that reach too close to the top, and every
time they pull it off, they smirk behind closed doors,
knowing the public will be fed just enough nonsense to
keep the outrage manageable. And isn't that just the DOJ's
favorite trick. Nothing to see here, folks. That should be
on their letterhead at this point. Hell, it should be
their motto carved into the lobby wall in big gold letters.
(01:33):
And they do it with a straight face too. The
same people who brag about transparency in front of the
cameras can't answer a simple question about where one of
the world's most connected trial traffickers is being stashed. You
gotta laugh. It's black comedy at this point. These are
the same geniuses who lose laptops, forget flight logs, and
somehow misplace an entire sex trafficking empire a real professional
(01:55):
outlet they got over there. They'll brief you on TikTok
bands and an EA cigarette regular relations before they'll tell
you what's going on with Maxwell. Every silence, every delay,
every no comment, it's all part of the performance, the
same show they've been running since the day Epstein died.
And you know what's wild, They actually think that people
still buy it. They think we forgot that Epstein was
(02:17):
under a constant watch right up until the cameras mysteriously
malfunctioned and the guards just happened to fall asleep. Yeah, sure,
pull the other one. But now they've got a little problem,
don't they. Pam Bondi's name just got thrown into the mix. Finally,
someone with a bit of bite, asking why this transfer
stinks to high heaven. You can almost hear the DJ
(02:38):
sweating through their suits, praying she doesn't go off script,
because if those threads are pulled, the whole thing might
unravel faster than Epstein's bed sheets. And that's exactly what
they're afraid of. Sunlight, accountability, the kind of questions that
force them to stop pretending the whole operation was above board.
You can tell by the body language of every official
(02:58):
asked about it. They tense up, look down, and spit
out the same robotic garbage. We can't comment on ongoing matters.
Oh really, you sure had plenty to say when it
was time to tell us justice had been served. Funny
how the talking points dry up when the subject shifts
from prosecutions to cover ups. The DOJ wants silence because
silence keeps the machine running. Silence protects the donors, the judges,
(03:22):
the hedge fun boys, and the ones who visited private
islands without passports. It keeps the powerful comfortable and the
public confused. That's the game. Tire people out, drown them
in legal jargon, and hope you all move on. Like
I always tell you, they rely on your fatigue because
outrage fades faster than memory in this country. But guess
(03:44):
what the silence is over. People are paying attention again.
The same crowd they thought would just scroll on by
is asking the one question they can't stand. Who the
hell approved of this transfer and why? And that's the
crack in the armor because once that question takes hold,
it leads to others. Who was she meeting with in prison?
(04:04):
What deals were made behind closed doors? Why does every
person tie to Ebstein either vanish suicide or get shuffled
around the system like a bad loan. They can't bury
every answer, not anymore, because the truth is, this whole
Gland Maxwell saga has never been about justice. It's always
been about damage control. It always has been. From the
(04:26):
moment she was arrested. The system's priority was in transparency.
It was containment. Keep her talking just enough, to pretend accountability,
but not enough to burn the wrong people. Every move
since then has been about managing optics, not truth, and
with the transfer, they overplayed their hand. The silence isn't
reassuring anymore. It's deafening, it's suspicious. It's a blinking neon
(04:50):
sign that says we're hiding something. And every time the
DOJ ducks a question, every time they played dumb, they
remind the rest of us exactly who they really work for,
and it sure as hell is in us. It's the
same faceless network that's been buying silence since the beginning
of this whole sordid saga, the same crowd that can
erase people, rewrite history and make even the ugliest crimes
(05:13):
look like clerical errors. They think the public's too numb,
too distracted, too cynical to care, but they've misread the room.
This time, the patience is gone, the trust is shot,
and the silence isn't fooling anybody anymore. The people are watching,
and whether they like it or not, this time we're
not shutting up. This article was published by the Times
(05:37):
and the headline Pambondy ordered to explain Glenn maxwell prison move.
This article was authored by Connor Stringer. Pambondy has been
ordered to explain the Glenn Maxwell transfer to a minimum
security prison amid claim she was given preferential treatment like
this should have been something that happened right away. All right,
(05:59):
we're moving Glenn Maxwell, and here's why. But no, oh,
it's operational security. It's because she's gonna be in trouble
at the other prison because she's talking to the government. Now,
nobody buys that. Do you know how many people are
speaking to the government on a daily basis in jail,
A whole lot, a whole lot of them. And what
(06:22):
you think at Tallahassee in the female prison, and they're
gonna shank Glenn Maxwell. I'll take things that have never
happened in the history of the facility for a thousand, please,
because that's a bunch of bs. That facility is not
a place where something like that happens. So THAT'SDA that
(06:43):
whole excuse that it was for security PURPOSESDA. I mean,
Glenn Maxwell was already in the honor dorm at Tallahassee.
So somebody needs to explain what's going on here. Maxwell,
the former girlfriend of Jeffrey Epstein. You mean co conspirator,
you mean fellow all around and bipedal serpent and child molester. Right,
(07:03):
was moved from Florida to the federal prison Camp Brian
in Texas shortly after she was interviewed by the Trump
administration about the pedophile and his associates, the British socialite.
You mean human trafficker. Right, Let's call her what she is.
She's a child molesting human trafficker who is currently serving
a twenty year jail sentence for a procuring underage girls
(07:24):
for Epstein did not implicate Donald Trump in any wrongdoing
during her two day questioning with Todd Baby Billy Blanche,
the Deputy Attorney General. She didn't implicate anybody. She has
nothing to serve up. Anything that she could possibly give up,
the government already has. The only use they could find
for Glayne Maxwell is to put her on the stand
(07:47):
to testify, and good luck with that. Can you imagine
one of these great lawyers cross examining Glayne Maxwell after
she's been charged with two counts of perjury previously, and
we all know she's a liar. Oh yeah, I'm sure that.
Oh I don't know. Tenny Garrigos wouldn't have a field
day with that. I'm sure that Nicole west Moreland wouldn't
(08:08):
love to destroy Glayne Maxwell. I mean, are you kidneing
right now? Are you for real? Nobody's putting her on
the stand, nobody's using her as a witness. All of
this was just a bunch of bs. The timing of
Maxwell's prison move after the interview has led to accusations
that she received favorable treatment for not implicating the president.
(08:29):
That's what it looks like. What else would she get
moved for? What did she serve up that was so actionable,
so great that they'd move her to this facility. And look,
I'm not completely against people getting moved if they offer
up some actionable intelligence, like the situation with el Choppo.
When everything ends up playing out and El Mile gets
(08:50):
that sentence, el Choppo's gonna end up getting favorable conditions.
That was all part of the deal, and I'm completely
fine with that. But with somebody like Lane Maxwell didn't
serve anything up. What sort of arrests were made because
of Glene Maxwell? What sort of justice was served because
the skuffuza? None? The only justice is that she's sitting
(09:10):
in prison and the fact that you took even that
little bit of justice away. I mean, really, let's be
real here, that's what they did is just beyond the
pal It's unforgivable, it's unexcusable. And I don't care who's
offended when I say it, because I have real bad
news for you. If you're on the side of Glaine Maxwell,
my friend, you're on the losing side. Robert Garcia, who
(09:36):
is leading the House Oversight Committee's investigation into Epstein, has
demanded miss Bondi, mister Trump's attorney general, explain why Maxwell
was transferred. I think that's a legitimate ask. Now, of course,
there's a lot of nonsensical bs going on when it
comes to both sides of the aisle, turning this into
a political football. People who have never really even cared
(09:58):
one bit about what's going on are now acting like
they've been here from the beginning. But as far as
Pam Bondi goes, and as far as this decision, one
hundred percent, she's the boss, right, Well, why was Todd
Blanche there, what sort of deal was made, what went
into the transfer? Just basic information, right, None of this
(10:19):
is national security. Each day that paum Bondy and the
Department of Justice fail to comply with our subpoena to
release the full Epstein files. Is another day Donald Trump
continues his White House cover up. He said, we're demanding
Pam Bondy and the DOJ Department of Justice conply with
our subpoena, stop protecting pedophiles and fulfill their legally bound
(10:40):
commitment so our committee can review the full Epstein files.
We will not stop fighting until we get the truth
and those implicated are held accountable. Well, mister Garcia, how
about you start with Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton. Didn't
you just let them get a pass on their subpoena
so they can go raise money for Terry mccauliffe. So
(11:01):
please stop the cap either it's all hands on deck
or nobody's paying attention of the bullshit you're throwing. You're
turning into a partisan issue, and what you're going to
do is you're going to turn a lot of people off.
That's what you're gonna do, and no justice will come
from it. Sure, you'll get your talking points, you'll be
able to use it as a political cudgel to smash
a few opponents, But in the long run, is that
(11:23):
going to bring justice for the survivors. Is that going
to give them the peace of mind to know that
there's ramifications for the bullshit that happened to them? Because
all this carrying on by mister Garcia here is all
fine and well for the cameras, But how about the
same kind of performance when it comes to Clinton or
Stacy Plaskett or any of these other people that were involved.
(11:45):
The committee which released Epstein's infamous birthday book that included
a body note from the President gave miss Bondi until
October thirtieth to provide a response. Mister Trump faced backlash
from supporters for his own association with Epstein and the
botch release of the so called client list, which he
insists does not exist. Well, it doesn't, not in the
(12:06):
sense that people make it out to exist. Oh sure,
there's a list of people who were hanging out, a
list of people that were around, a list of the girls.
But as far as big names look, Virginia already gave
you a bunch of big names. Nobody did shit about it.
What those names weren't good enough, They weren't juicy enough
for you. The US Department of Justice closed the case
(12:28):
on Epstein earlier this year, ruling there was no incriminating
client list or any evidence at Epstein may have blackmail
prominent people. Maxwell's lawyers capitalized on the political pressure by
offering her cooperation in the efforts to dispel speculation and
pledging to testify before Congress should he partner imagine even
(12:49):
thinking about partnering Gallainne Maxwell. Since then, her request for
freedom suffered a huge setback earlier this month, when the
Supreme Court judges rejected or appear, every single court in
the land has rejected her appeal. Now, how could anyone
in good conscience think that Glainne Maxwell is being wronged here,
(13:10):
that Glayinne Maxwell is some kind of patsy. Glenn Maxwell
is getting everything she deserves. And frankly, if she wasn't rich,
if her name wasn't Maxwell, she'd be in a facility
that's way worse than even Tallahassee. Maxwell's lawyers argue that
(13:30):
her conviction is invalid, saying the plea agreement made with
Epstein in Florida in two thousand and seven, which shields
his associates, should have barred her criminal prosecution in New York.
In theory, the decision by the US highest Court of
appeals means her only hope of any early release is
through a pardon, which the President is so far refused
to grant. No other way. I mean, she can file habeas,
(13:54):
corpus motions and shit like that, but she's gonna fail.
None of that's gonna work. So for all intents and purposes,
Maxwell's goose is cooked, unless, of course, Donald Trump steps in.
But even if he does, remember we've talked about dual
sovereignty already, where the state can go after Maxwell. So
there's always that in the back pocket, and hopefully that
(14:15):
could be used as a counterweight to any kind of
pardon if a pardon comes. Maxwell now waits for a
pardon in Heer, Texas prison cell, which is home to
more than five hundred inmates, most of whom are serving
time for nonviolent offenses and white collar crimes, all of them.
That's what they're all serving time. Therefore, Maxwell is the
(14:36):
only difference. Okay, So let's not act like this is
something that happens all the time. This is way off base,
something that very rarely happens, and completely against BOP policy
in the first place. According to the prison's handbook, life
at the prison is centered around work, with inmates earning
up to one dollar and fifteen cents an hour for
their jobs, many of which involve food service and factory work.
(15:00):
Beyond work, inmates tate classes on foreign languages and business skills,
play sports, watch television, and attend religious services. The Hambook states,
sounds like a retirement community to me, and fuck, when
you grow up poor, that sounds like a good deal. Huh.
I can go learn some foreign languages, some business skills,
I could play some sports, watch TV, and I don't
(15:23):
have to pay for it. Real talk, that sounds better
than some people's lives. The Epstein case has long been
the subject of conspiracy theories, with many believing the disgrace
financier sex trafficked underage women to a circle of high
profile associates. Theory is intensified when the Trump administration refused
to publish documents held by the government on Epstein. Cash Ptel,
(15:46):
the director of the FBI, said in a congressional testimony
on September sixteenth, that there was no credible information that
Epstein traffic women and underage girls to anyone but himself.
And you know what's funny if you can still laugh
about this kind of thing is how predictable it's all become.
Every time the walls start to close in the same
(16:07):
song starts playing ongoing investigation, no comment, administrative matter. They
rotate the excuses like tires, and here we are again.
Klan Maxwell moved like contraband in the night, with Department
of Justice acting like it's none of our business. Newsflash,
it is our business. It's the public's business. This woman
(16:27):
wasn't running a lemonade stand. She was running logistics for
one of the darkest criminal networks in modern history. But
you wouldn't know that from how quiet everyone suddenly got.
You think the Bureau of Prisons and the DOJ were
auditioning for a mime troop. They treat us like we're
too dumb, to distracted, too busy fighting over politics to
notice the rot spreading right under our noses. But we
(16:51):
do notice. We remember the broken cameras, the sleeping guards,
the rush cremations, the Steald files. We remember the promises
of accountability that turned into another smoke screen. And now
with the transfer, they're running the same play again, Shuffle, hide, deny.
They think that if they can stretch it out long enough,
people are gonna move on. That's what they always think,
(17:12):
but this time it feels a little different. This time
there's no more trust to burn. So yeah, let them hide,
let them dodge questions and throw their usual fog over
the truth. It won't work forever, because every cover up,
every deflection, every smug we're not at liberty to discuss.
That just lights the fire higher. And when the dam
finally breaks, all the secrets they've been protecting are gonna
(17:36):
come pouring out. You can only smother the truth for
so long before it starts clawing its way to the surface.
And when it does, the DOJ can't bury it with jargon,
and the politicians can't round it out with spin because
this isn't just about Maxwell anymore. It's about how the
system protected her, the people who funded her, and the
officials who let it all slide in the name of procedure.
(17:58):
So if they want silence, they're in the wrong country.
We've got microphones, cameras and long memories, and this story
is not going away, not this time, not with this crowd,
not with so much on the line. All of the
information that goes with this episode can be found in
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