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December 28, 2025 13 mins
A newly unsealed document tied to the Jeffrey Epstein case revealed that federal investigators once compiled a far broader roadmap for potential prosecutions than the public had previously been led to believe. The document lays out a sweeping list of individuals identified as possible co-conspirators or facilitators, reflecting prosecutors’ internal view that Epstein’s crimes operated as a network rather than the actions of a lone predator. According to the filing, investigators examined roles ranging from recruitment and transportation of minors to financial management, scheduling, housing, and legal shielding. The scope of the list underscores that authorities were, at least at one stage, actively considering charges against multiple actors who allegedly enabled or benefited from Epstein’s abuse. Its unsealing directly contradicts years of official rhetoric that minimized the breadth of criminal exposure beyond Epstein himself.

The most damning aspect of the unsealed document is not merely who appears on the list, but what it exposes about prosecutorial intent quietly evaporating behind closed doors. This wasn’t a case where investigators lacked imagination or awareness; the file shows they understood the architecture of Epstein’s operation and mapped out how it functioned as a criminal enterprise with interchangeable parts. Yet instead of dismantling that structure, the system narrowed its focus until Epstein became both the beginning and the end of the story. Names were flagged, conduct was outlined, and potential charges were sketched—then the trail simply stops. The silence that follows reads less like oversight and more like retreat, leaving behind a record that suggests justice was not defeated by ignorance, but abandoned by choice.



to contact me:


bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



source:

Newly unearthed Epstein documents reveal long list of potential SDNY prosecutions in wake of pedo's death | New York Post


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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What's up, everyone, and welcome to another episode of the
Epstein Chronicles. The conversation about Jeffrey Epstein's alleged co conspirators
continues to rage, and now a new document that was
released as part of the dump looks like a roadmap
for those prosecutions. And as you all know, no prosecutions

(00:20):
ever came, unless, of course, we're talking about Klainne Maxwell
or Jean Luke Brunel. But besides that, nobody was ever
even charged, which obviously is one of the biggest issues
with the whole entire investigation. When you have all of
that evidence, when you have so many people naming people
like Sarah Kelln Vickers in open court, you would think
that there would be a robust investigation into these alleged

(00:42):
co conspirators, but no, and now here we are, all
these years later, and people are running wild with who
they think the co conspirators are. But like everything else,
when it comes to Jeffrey Epstein, it's not going to
be what people think it's going to be. And the
co conspirators, in my opinion, are the ones that we've
been discussing for years now. Now, of course, there are

(01:04):
other co conspirators that have taken part, at least allegedly,
and those people should also be added to the conversation.
But I think that if you're looking for a co
conspirator or a co conspirators, there were plenty to choose
from throughout this whole entire ordeal. And every single person
that was around Epstein on a daily basis, the people
who scheduled the girls, the people who paid the girls,

(01:25):
the people who put things in motion, all of those
people were directly involved. And if this was a Rico case,
everybody would have been hit with predicates and we would
have had a whole different conversation today. But that's the
reason they didn't use Rico, because the idea was never
to get justice. It was always to make this go away.
And for years they did a very good job at

(01:48):
making sure that happened. But those days are over. Now
that you folks are paying attention, now that the world
at large is paying attention, it's rather obvious to everybody
that there's a bunch holds them. The plot and the
official narrative that were being served up by the federal
government stinks to high heaven. Today's article is from the

(02:10):
New York Post and the headline newly unearthed Jeffrey Epstein
documents reveal a list of potential prosecutions. This article was
authored by Shane Galvin and jefferl. Federal authorities once had
a much larger investigation in mind for disgrace financier Jeffrey Epstein,
pedophile and disassociates, with newly released documents pointing towards to

(02:32):
undisclosed potential targets, including a corporate prosecution. An email released
by authority showed the problem is was and always will
be that the scope of the investigation was too limited.
And that was what I was complaining about from the
very beginning. This should have been a Rico case. And
I know you're tired of me saying that, and I'm
sure you're tired of hearing it, but you're going to

(02:54):
hear it again because if this was a Rico case,
like it should have been, all of this is functory
at best, because everybody is outed, everybody's caught up, and
everybody is flipping on everybody else. But when you're not
threatening people with one hundred year sentences due to Rico,
why would they flip on each other? Why would anybody

(03:15):
become a witness why would anybody flip on the organization.
They're all getting paid, they're all getting taken care of.
And unfortunately, Jeffrey Epstein was smart enough to have these
people involved in his crimes directly, so they don't want
to out themselves, right, And that's why RICO would be
so effective here, because if you hit them with RICO charges,

(03:36):
then they'd be forced, compelled to do the right thing,
or they'd be sitting in a jail cell for about
five thousand years. And as far as Cobra prosecutions go,
plenty of people that should have been hammed up, starting
with the financial sector. The outline of the investigation were
detailed in a May twenty twenty email from the Southern

(03:56):
District of New York, a partially redacted version of which
the Justice Department released December twenty fourth under a new
law requiring the release of all Epstein related documents. Well,
how's that going? Not so well, is it. We haven't
even seen a portion of the documents yet. No three twos,
no witness reports, none of the good stuff. Just a

(04:18):
bunch of recycled nonsense. And of course there have been
some gems, no doubt about it, some golden nuggets, But
for the most part, people want to see the three twos.
People want to see the inner guts of how this
was all moving at the Justice Department. And when you
look at the emails that we're getting from the Justice Department,
the internal emails, they even have the agent's names redacted. Now,

(04:41):
why would you do that? Maybe we want to check
their work, Maybe we want to know what they were
up to. Remember, the law says that the only people
that should be redacted are victims. I think that the
American people should know who was derelict in their duty
when it comes to the FBI and the US Attorney's office.
If we're gonna pile on alex Acosta, and we should,

(05:03):
we should be piling on all of his associates as well,
everybody that was involved, every last person, all the way
up to DOJ main office. The single page summary from
an assistant US attorney whose name was redacted reference memos
on several potential investigative pathways. One of the previously undisclosed
and still scant detailed bullet points is a corporate prosecution

(05:24):
memo from December twenty nineteen that was supposedly never discussed,
but outlined after Epstein's death. According to the email, Yeah,
they probably discussed it and their bosses told them no way. Well,
you think we're gonna let you bring a case against
Les Wexner, one of our biggest donors. What are you crazy,
That's never gonna happen. Let's keep it nice and narrow.

(05:47):
Let's go after Epstein himself. Let's go after Maxwell. Let's
call them loan predators. Let's make sure nobody else gets
caught up. That's the whole motivation here, and the fact
that they think they're gonna get away with it shows
you just how little respect they have for you and
your intelligence. Another bullet point was for co conspirators we
could potentially charge, which could be a list of ten

(06:09):
supposed co conspirators of Epstein federal investigators generated after Epstein's
twenty nineteen arrest, including Glenn Maxwell, Victoria's secret billionaire Les Wexner,
and French modeling agent Jean Luke Brunel. You mean French
rapist John Luke Brunell, and not just involved with Epstein's rapage,
but before that he was prolific when it comes to

(06:32):
abusing women in the modeling world. Everybody knew nobody stopped them.
They just let it keep going on because hey, that's
the way things are, right. Imagine being part of that
world and just keeping your eyes closed and never saying anything,
never stepping up, never punching one of these dumb fucks
right in the face. It's unbelievable to me. If I

(06:54):
was in a room with one of these people for
longer than five minutes, I'd be catching a charge, and
not because some kind of tough guy, but because I'm
so disgusted by their behavior. I mean, how many people
were in rooms with these dudes, with Jeffrey Epstein even
after his first arrest, and we're just having the time
of their lives. Imagine know, when somebody was picking up

(07:16):
underage girls I won't call them prostitutes because that's not
what they were, underage girls, and then acting so flipping
about it, acting like it's no big deal, acting like
that's just how it goes, and you just sit there
and break bread with this man, try and get some
kind of business deal cracked out. For me, the only
thing getting cracked out would be Epstein's mouth, and I'd

(07:39):
happily get arrested after it. Remember that scene in Billions
when Bobby Axelrod punches that dude in the face, and
as he's leaving, they're like, oh, we're gonna sue you,
blah blah blah blah blah, and he looks back and
goes worth it. That's how I would feel. And look,
I'm not somebody who's a violent person at all, not
in my old age. Plenty of that in my younger
years sun Zoo than Machiavelli these days. But man, some people,

(08:04):
well they deserve that smoke. Only. Maxwell was prosecuted for
her part in the international sex trafficking scheme orchestrated by Epstein.
A twenty six page prosecution memo on a single redacted
though distinct subject matter from April twenty twenty also appeared
on the list and was apparently discussed just three weeks before.

(08:26):
According to the document, The co conspirator prosecution memo was
circulated five days after Epstein died. Those alleged accomplices are
detailed in an additional eighty six page memo from December
twenty nineteen. According to the document, that's what we want
to see. We want those kinds of documents because those
are the documents that move the needle. Those are the

(08:47):
documents that tell us and show us the inner workings
at the FBI at the time and why they chose
not to charge these co conspirators who should have been charged.
And I mean, you'd think that the most transparent administration
in history would have had that information out first. Right. Hey, look,
here's the most important information, the most explosive, the kind
of information that's going to move the needle. But yet

(09:10):
after what a million documents or whatever they said they released,
we still don't have it. And in my opinion, that
should tell you everything you need to know about what
they fear. The Epstein investigation included the NYPD and FBI
Child Exploitation Human Trafficking Task Force, which went so far
as to collect photos of potential co conspirators. Document showed

(09:34):
a member of that group wrote in August nineteenth, twenty nineteen,
email with the subject line Epstein co conspirator picks, just
ten days after Epstein died in Brooklyn lockup. Neither those
photos nor other emails with that subject line in reference
to the photos seemed to appear elsewhere in the documents. Yeah,
they probably burned it already. I mean, do you really

(09:57):
think this is a full, transparent look at what's going on,
or do you think we're being bullshitted? Well, I know
what history tells us, and it's not looking pretty, folks.
Further revelations regarding the SDNY investigation int Epstein could be
featured in the upcoming release of one million documents from
the agency, which were revealed on December twenty fourth and

(10:18):
are now being processed by the Department of Justice. And
that's a whole last other conversation. How could the DOJ
come out and say that there's no investigation into anybody
else and they didn't even go through all the documents.
You want to talk about in competence, either by design
or just by failure. Either way, it's the same thing.
In competence rules the day. Chris Wecker, a former assistant

(10:44):
director of the FBI's Criminal Investigative Division who also worked
at the SDNY, expressed his disbelief that more was not
done by investigators all by design, folks. And this is
the drama that I've been beaten on for years now.
Need to wise up to what's going on here. And
it's not just that Jeffrey Epstein was some kind of

(11:04):
sick degenerate, which he was, but it's also the institutional
failure that allowed it and continues to allow it, and
that's the wheel that needs to be broken. That bullshit
needs to end forever. I was an FBI agent in
Miami for eight years and a former US attorney, Alex Acosta,
was down there. Then. Schwecker told the Post that investigation

(11:26):
was clearly stifled. He had no shit it was. Imagine
thinking that everything's on the up and up and there's
nothing to see here. That everybody was treated fairly with respect,
that the US citizens, the taxpayers, we were treated with respect,
and most importantly, that the survivors were treated with respect.
Imagine believing that you have to be one dumb son

(11:48):
of a bitch to believe that nonsense. Honestly, I think
they're still stifling and holding some information back. I don't
know if it's the bigger, grander conspiracy that a lot
of people think that it is, but I think they're
being very, very cautious about curating what comes out. Swecker
suggested the problem with legacy media, well, they have many problems,

(12:10):
but one of the biggest problems is that they still
don't understand who they're dealing with or what they're dealing with.
They still refuse to see the forest through the trees
and understand that the fix was in. And until they
do that, they're going to continue to miss the bigger story,
because again, this was not just about one man. It's
about the institutions that protected him and the people that

(12:33):
were in charge of those institutions at the time. They
need to be held accountable. Representative Thomas Massey, who President
Trump roasted in a Christmas Day message, fumed about the
volume suddenly growing to one point seven million after the
deadline for release. And they still expect you to believe

(12:53):
this involves only two guilty people, he posted. Well, he's right,
and all you have to do is take a look
at the way Trump is focusing on Thomas Massey, and
you realize right away that bro is over the target.
You don't carry on like that unless somebody is over
the target. You don't try and destroy a man on
Christmas Day unless you're an unhinged lunatic, which Trump is.

(13:15):
And because you fear what they're saying or where their
investigation's going. And I think it's relatively clear at this
point the federal government and the Trump administration fears the
truth about Jeffrey Epstein being released, and you know what
they should. All of the information that goes with this
episode can be found in the description box.
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