Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Darren Endyke and Richard Kahan are two of the smarmiest,
scummiest individuals involved in this whole, entire, sordid case in
my opinion, Yet somehow they're still playing a major role.
Both of these guys are executors of the estate when
they should really be guests of the state instead. From
(00:24):
the very beginning, especially Darren Endyke, they have been obstinate
with the survivors. Getting the compensation fund set up was
a struggle. Having it administered was the struggle, And still
to this day, Endike and Khan are not doing the
(00:44):
right thing. Is it any wonder that they're named in
a suit? Is it any wonder that they're being looked
at criminally? These two men have zero business being involved
in any of this.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
It's offensive.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
And I can only imagine if me, just being some regular,
run of the mill, average moron citizen is offended, I
can only imagine how the.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Survivors feel about it.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
These two people should have no input or no say
so as to anything moving forward. There has to be
some sort of apparatus or some sort of way to
have these people removed from their positions as executors. The
court needs to step in and they need to be gone.
(01:40):
Maybe if they're indicted, they'll have to be removed. I
don't know, Honestly, I don't know how any of this
stuff really works when it comes to executors of an
estate or anything like that. This is all new to
me as well, and we're all trying to work our
way through it, right, But it seems to me that
if these.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Two dudes have the class.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Of responsibility in some regards as to what happened in
this case, it would seem to me that these two
guys should not be the executors of the estate, and
that there has to be some sort of way to
make sure that they are no longer involved, because they
have proven themselves time and time again as obstinate, as
(02:25):
not wanting to make things move in a quick manner,
and certainly not helpful. So when it comes to con
and Endyke, I'm very very very clear about how I
feel these dudes have no business being anywhere near this case,
(02:48):
never mind as executors. And our article today is going
to go into that just a little bit. This is
an article from the Miami Herald and the the headline
is executors of Jeffrey Epstein a state ask Virgin Islands
judge to seal more records. The author of the article
(03:08):
is Kevin G.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
Hall.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
And again here they are again looking to get more
records sealed. They want more secrecy, more privacy. I mean,
how much more secrecy do you want here? This stuff,
this whole entire case has been stuffed down into a
hole for the for decades, and now all of a
sudden it's coming to light, and these two idiots are
talking about how they want more record sealed. I really
(03:34):
hope that the judge tells them to beat it. I
really hope that they don't get their way. And honestly,
it will be a great day when we wake up
and we see that both of these idiots have unsealed
indictments in the news. Executors of the estate of disgraced
(03:54):
financier pedophile Jeffrey Epstein asked to judge in the US
Virgin Islands on Tuesday to place under seal the monthly
reports coming from the administrator of a special fund created
to compensate Epstein's sexual abuse survivors. So why in the
world would they want to have the monthly reports under
(04:16):
seal if they're doing the right thing, and they're treating
the survivors correctly, and they're not making any dumbass, stupid moves.
Why in the hell would they want this stuff to
stay under seal? It just does not make any sense. Now,
if the survivors didn't want numbers getting out as far
as how much money they received, I could see that
from a privacy standpoint, But the estate has no privacy anymore.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
They should be laid bare for everybody to see.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
They have obviously admitted to wrongdoing by Jeffrey Epstein, or
they wouldn't be involved in this compensation fund.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
So that means I don't want to hear anything about
privacy anymore from the estate. It all should be laid bare.
In a twenty four page filing to Judge Carolyn p
Herman Purcell, the Magistrate Judge of the Superior Court, the
estate did not present a pressing justification for why the
(05:12):
report should be kept secret. And I don't really care
for Judge Purcell so far as far as her rulings go.
She doesn't really seem to be the type of judge
that should be handling a case like this in my opinion,
But who knows. Maybe going forward, she will prove to
be a bit more staunch when it comes to dealing
(05:32):
with people like Indike and Khan. But I'm not gonna
hold my breath. In order to maintain the confidentiality of
the programs administers monthly reports as agreed to by the
Attorney General and Claimant's Counsel. Given the importance of maintaining
an effective confidential at claimants sold discretion mechanism to provide
(05:55):
compensation to those who suffered sexual abuse at mister Epstein's hands,
the executors seek the court's approval to submit the program
administrators monthly reports under seal. Said the request from Darren
k Endyke and Richard Kahn, respectively, the chief lawyer and
accountant for the Epstein estate. It is so ridiculous that
(06:18):
these guys actually think that people are going to be
okay with this. I highly doubt anybody is going to
be okay with this information coming out under seal. There
has been enough.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
Of that here. What are you so scared of?
Speaker 1 (06:32):
What are you trying to obfuscate? It is time for
the curtain to be pulled completely back and for the
public to have a whole eye full of what is occurring.
Because some people still don't believe what is going on here.
Some people don't believe it until they see it in
(06:53):
the New York Times or one of the other propagate
one of the other propaganda machine newspapers. And we're starting
to see that even the people the symbiots and the
people who had their symbiotic relationship with the CIA, such
as the New York Times and the Washington Post, they're
being forced to cover this story now as well because
(07:15):
they want the clicks. But some people, well, they are
never gonna believe what happened here because the secrecy of
the media. The Epstein Survivors Compensation Fund officially opened its
doors on June twenty fifth, and its new program administrator,
(07:36):
Jordana Jordi Feldman, filed required monthly reports to the court
on August third and again last week.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
So these are the reports.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
That they want sealed, right, Connan Indyke don't want these
reports out for the public to consume for whatever reason.
My guess would be is because Conan Indyke are still
up the scumbaggery. There's no indication that Feldman sought to
have her reports filed under seal, since all parties had
already agreed on their confidentiality. In fact, her fund's website
(08:11):
notes that her monthly communication to the court will report
on an aggregate level only. No individual claimant information will
be published or disclosed in a way that compromises claimant confidentiality. Well,
that's good, right. If again, if the claimants, the survivors
don't want their information out there, then that's up to them.
(08:32):
They have been through enough and I think that they
have earned the right to some privacy at this point. Now,
Indike and con not so much, all right, it's the
state needs to be looking at them. And remember the state.
I know this is going to be mind boggling for
some people to understand and hard for some people to
(08:52):
let seep in, but remember the state works for us. Okay,
So Indike and Khan should not have any privacy and
the estates should not have any privacy. Tuesday's filing by
the co executors does provide some insight into the Compensation Fund,
which was designed to give Epstein survivors a more private
(09:14):
forum away from the court battles to seek a measure
of financial redress for what happened to them. The filing
from Endiken Cohn said forty seven individuals have submitted claims
to the Confidential Compensation Fund, that eight determinations have been
made and individual claimants informed, and that no funds have
(09:34):
yet been distributed. The filing also said the deadline for
accepting claims is March twenty fifth, twenty twenty one. So
eight determinations have been made out of the forty seven
claims that have been submitted so far. As to what
those numbers are, we have no idea. That has not
been released so far, we don't know. Nobody's talked about it.
(09:57):
It remains confidential.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
So what I will say.
Speaker 1 (10:01):
Is, at least there is some movement here, right, That's
a good thing. But again, I will reserve judgment until
we see how this clan process all shakes out. I'm
not going to sit here and act like.
Speaker 2 (10:13):
Oh, everything's going great. I have no idea, right all.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
The only information I have is the same information that
we're all reading right here. But at least it's not
sitting idle. There has been eight determinations. Are those determinations.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Correct? Are they going to be accepted? Who knows.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
We'll have to see the issue of sealed documents has
vastly complicated a number of civil suits involving Gielen Maxwell,
Epstein's alleged Madam, co conspirator, fellow child abuser, general all
around scumbag, and bipedal serpent. The Miami Herald sued for
the release of the documents, and a civil suits settled
(10:51):
in twenty seventeen between Maxwell and Virginia Roberts, Epstein's longtime accuser,
who alleges the two trafficked underage girls for sex and
abuse them. The release of those documents has led to
a lengthy legal fight, as Maxwell's lawyers attempt to keep
secret a deposition from her that they say will prejudice
(11:13):
her in her criminal case. She was arrested on July
second on charges she aided Epstein's alleged sexual crimes.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
Now we know.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
That the lawyers for Gilaine Maxwell have been going hard
in the paint to keep this stuff sealed. They've tried
every trick in the book. They've tried to slow things down,
they've tried to muddy the waters, and they have also
tried to say that, oh, we have confidential information. It
has just appeared and it's going to change everything, and
(11:44):
none of it has worked.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
All the money she has spent on these.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
High profile lawyers all the time they have spent wrangling
and negotiating behind the scenes. All of the loopholes they've
attempted to jump through have all turned up not off
for them. And I really like the way that it's going.
It really looks like for the first time that these
(12:11):
people are finally on the ropes, that these people are
finally on the run, or as I like to say,
in twenty twenty, the predators most assuredly have become the prey.
And we see that as the court keeps handing l's
(12:33):
to Gielan Maxwell. We see people like Glenn Dubin getting
a subpoenad, and we see people like Darren Khan, Richard Kahn,
and Darren Endyke under the microscope. Now again, remember the
grand jury is still unpaneled. They are still investigating, and
I would not be shocked if there are many sealed
(12:56):
indictments that have to do with this case, and if
Indyke and Khan or one of the other is named
in one of those sealed indictments, again, I will.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Not be shocked.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
They played a critical and crucial role in helping Jeffrey
Epstein maintain his criminal sex trafficking international enterprise.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Is that clear enough?
Speaker 1 (13:25):
Indike and Khan, both longtime Epstein associates, are co executors
of Epstein's will, which was changed shortly before he was
ruled dead by hanging in a Manhattan jail cell in
August of twenty nineteen. They face a civil enforcement action
by the Attorney General of the US Virgin Islands, Denise George,
who alleges they are part of an ongoing criminal enterprise.
(13:49):
Lawyers for the for the Epstein estate had no immediate comment,
nor did Feldman's office. Yeah, it's not it's not even
alleging at this point, it's obvious that Khan and Indyke
were part of the Epstein operation, that were part of
the inner circle. And and Indike especially has his dirty
ass fingerprints all over this case. His signature is everywhere.
(14:14):
He helped out the associates, he helped out the Core four,
and for some reason and somehow, this man is involved
as an executor of the estate. I cannot wait for
the day that Darren Indike.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
Faces the music.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
If you'd like to contact me, you can do that
at Bobby Kapuci at proton mail dot com.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
That's b O.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
B b Y c ap U c CI at ProtonMail
dot com. You can also find me on that festering, bubbling,
oozing cesspool called Twitter at bo bb y Underscore c
ap U c CI. All of the links that go
with this episode can be found in the description box