
The released Florida grand jury documents gave the public a rare look at the machinery that helped produce Jeffrey Epstein’s so-called sweetheart deal, and what they showed only made the original handling of the case look worse. The transcripts...
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Epstein Case Commentator
What's up everyone and welcome back to the Epstein Chronicles. There seems to be a lot of renewed interest in Jeffrey Epstein and his behavior as of late. And that renewed interest seems to be focused on on the island. And while the island is a big part of the story, it's not the only part of this story. In fact, I would contend that what happened in Florida during the first go round behind closed doors in the grand jury room is more important and will tell us more than anything we're ever going to get in the documents that are about to be released due to the defamation suit between Virginia and Ghislaine Maxwell. Because those are the documents that are about to come out. It's part of the continuous unsealing process that Judge Presca has been engaged in. So it's not like there's going to be these new bombshell names that are being released to people. And I think some folks are under the impression that they're about to get some kind of master list that's going to tell them everybody who was hanging out with Jeffrey Epstein and what all of these people were up to. Meanwhile, the focus, or at least some of the focus, should be on what's going on here in Palm beach and the battle to get these grand jury records unsealed because that'll get us right to the heart of all of the corruption, all of the that was going on behind the scenes and how the state prosecutors down in Florida thumb their nose at justice and instead help Jeffrey Epstein. And if you're truly interested in justice in this case and not just scoring political points, then that's something that you want to see happen. Because the very step of getting justice is people getting exposed for their bullshit behavior. And if we got to look at these grand jury documents, we will be for the first time getting an unadulterated look at what happened down there. And like any other mystery, like any other puzzle that needs to be solved. You have to start at the beginning. And if you really want justice in this case and you really want to make sure people are held accountable, we'll get these grand jury documents unsealed. Today. We have an article from the Miami Herald, and the headline, public has a Right to know. Lawmakers seek to open Jeffrey Epstein grand jury records. This article was authored by Carol Marvin Miller. Frustrated by several failed attempts to pry open the records from a Palm beach county grand jury that examined the activities of Jeffrey Epstein and then charged him only with minor offenses, two lawmakers have filed legislation to force the documents release. The two Florida legislators, both from Palm beach county, though members of opposing political parties, have introduced a bill that would make it possible to loosen the grip of grand jury secrecy in the Epstein case without weakening state laws that protect the confidentiality of. Of grand jury proceedings. Look, the grand jury proceedings, I get it. They have to be private for the most part. And fine, I understand. I don't like it. But that's the way the system's set up. But there's no good reason why these grand jury documents, when it comes to Jeffrey Epstein, who's already deceased, shouldn't be released to the public, considering Judge Presca has already deemed it necessary to release all of the documents from the defamation case. And we have seen several other judges release documents from this case as well. So why is the government being so resistant? What is it that the state of Florida has to hide when it comes to these documents? The proposed legislation was introduced by State Senator Tina Polsky, a Boca Raton Democrat. Representative Peggy Gossett Seidman, a freshman Republican from Highland beach, sponsored the bill in the House of Representatives. At the moment, the bill has not been assigned to committees in either chamber, and legislative staff members have yet to weigh in on it. I love how the staffers get to weigh in on it, Right? If I was ever a politician and I had some staffer come up to me and say, hey, you know what? I don't think this is a good bill for a, B or C reason. I tell them to go get stuffed and. And go answer some phones. I'm not here working for staffers. And these senators and these congressmen and women who do that are the worst of the worst. Polski, who is an attorney and mediator, said the bill was narrowly tailored to free up the record of testimony before the Epstein grand jury without jeopardizing the confidentiality of grand jury testimony in other proceedings. We saw this down in Kentucky with Breonna Taylor. They released the grand jury documents in that case as well. And I think that the public's interest here outweighs any secrecy that the state can try and put up on a pedestal and say they need to have to protect other cases moving forward, especially if this is tailored in a narrow manner, like Ms. Polsky is saying here. Polsky introduced the legislation at the request of Joseph Abruzzo, a former lawmaker who has served as Palm Beach County's Clerk of Courts since January of 2021. Abruzzo has been looking for a way to make public the Epstein grand jury record, Polski said, but has been hampered by state law. Well, Abruzzo has been one of the hurdles along the way. I guess he's starting to come around now, but. But I'll believe it when I see it. There are a lot of questions about how this case was handled a long time ago, Polski said. None of the players are involved anymore. This bill would not be doing any damage to court officials formerly involved in the case or the sanctity of grand jury testimony. The hell it wouldn't. There was so much corruption going on down here, and we're not just talking about from Epstein. We're talking about from all of these people who let him get away with it. Abruzzo, Polski said, wants to release it. This would give him the tools to get the transparency that he'd like to see, and certainly we know the media would like to see, and the general public. It's not even that we would like to see. We're entitled to it at this point. There is so much nonsense surrounding this case and so much bullshit that they should be falling all over themselves to provide clarity. You want to stop people from saying, oh, Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself. Well, provide some evidence to show people that he did indeed kill himself. But up till now, it's the whole rigmarole of, oh, just trust us, you're gonna have to believe us. And if history tells us anything, it's that we should not believe you. In a prepared statement, Abruzzo said, both the Florida Statutes and the Florida Court's rules of procedure are very clear about what my office can or cannot release related to any case, whether it's a simple divorce case or high profile case like the Epstein case. This carefully crafted bill would allow my office to release the Epstein records if a judge orders their release without affecting other grand jury cases in Florida and without upending our state's court system. Abruzzo added. And the court system in Florida is absolutely fubar, and you have some of the wildest judges going down here in florida that just do whatever the hell they want. In 2018, the Miami Herald reported that epstein, A multi millionaire, financier, pedophile, had operated a cult like network of underage girls who had been coerced to have sex with him either at his palm beach waterfront mansion or at other epstein properties in manhattan, new mexico, or his private island compound in the u. S. Virgin islands. The herald series called perversion of justice, Documented how epstein used money and connections to shield himself from from meaningful criminal liability. And if you're really interested in justice here, like I've been saying from the beginning, then these grand jury documents are where we're going to start. And from there, there should be a rico case that's dropped on every last one of these dirty rotten bastards who accepted any money from jeffrey epstein or were in business with them in any other manner because you know they were receiving ill gotten gains. And if it's good enough for my family members and good enough for your family members, Then why is it that jeffrey epstein, jess staley, leon black, glenn dubin and the rest of these scoundrels, why is it that they get away with it? A palm beach county grand jury returned a charge of solicitation of prostitution, an extremely minor offense compared to what had been alleged against epstein, whose attorneys then negotiated a deal that resulted in him pleading guilty in 2008 and serving 13 months in that county's jail, Owing to an extraordinarily generous work release arrangement. Epstein served much of that time at his luxurious office in west palm beach, where he was also not abiding by his parole and probation. We've done that episode already. The palm beach parole office, they got rid of the paper trail of epstein. There's no files there. So why is it that everything that has to do with Jeffrey epstein When it comes to files or videos, it just happens to disappear? It just happens to go away. I guess it's all just a coincidence, right? Media outlets, including the herald and the palm beach post, have sought for years to gain the release of witness testimony before before the grand jury. Critics of the plea deal, which was executed when barry krisher was palm beach's county top prosecutor, Long have wondered whether damning testimony was withheld from the grand jury or whether prosecutors soft sold the seriousness of epstein's conduct. We know that only one girl was brought up in front of the grand jury. And we also know that barry krish's office acted as a surrogate basically for jeffrey epstein and attacked his own witness. That's right. The prosecutors attacked their own witness, this girl who was brought up there to tell her story about what happened to her at the hands of that monstrous ass, Jeffrey Epstein. After the Herald's publication of Perversion of Justice, federal prosecutors in New York revived an investigation into Epstein and and he was arrested. He was awaiting trial in New York
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when he was found hanged in his
Epstein Case Commentator
cell in August of 2019. The death was ruled a suicide. Ghislaine Maxwell, a one time girlfriend co conspirator, general all around scuzzbag, fellow child abuser and bipedal serpent accused of procuring and scheduling girls for Epstein, was arrested on charges of abetting his behavior. She was convicted in December of 2021 of sex trafficking and sentenced the following year to 20 years whether it's slots
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Epstein Case Commentator
And now she's appealing that sentence using Harvey Weinstein's lawyer. Go figure. In a statement to the Herald, Palm Beach County's current State Attorney Dave Aronberg said Friday his office will not oppose the bill. Our office supports transparency with which is why three years ago we posted all the public records from the investigation and prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein online. These public records can be accessed through our website. Ehrenberg said. The case occurred several years and multiple state attorney administrations before I took office in 2013, Ehrenberg added. I have never seen or had access to Epstein grand jury documents as the State Attorney's office has never possessed them. I applaud Clerk Bruzo for his push for transparency. I will continue to have no objection to the clerk's release of the Epstein grand jury records. Well, let's get going with it. All right, enough is enough. Let's get those records out here and let's trim the fat. Let's know what's true, what's not true, what's and what's not, because my goal has always been to swim through that bullshit to get to the clarity and get to the truth. Gossett Seidman said she was eager to sponsor the bill in the State House after Polsky approached her with the idea. Gossett Seidman had worked as a journalist and public relations consultant for many years before running for office in Highland beach and said she believes strongly in the government and in the sunshine. I thought this was an opportunity to seek the truth and uphold the public's right to know what really happened almost 20 years ago in Palm beach county, gossette Seidman said of the Epstein case. This bill provides a chance for legislators to set a pathway for other officials to seek are truth and justice and transparency, gossett Seidman said. Who wants another Jeffrey Epstein? Nobody, she added. The public has a right to know. Hallelujah. But the problem is we have had several politicians throughout the years talk this same kind of and then never do anything about it. Now I'm not saying that's going to happen here this time around because I don't know, I hope it doesn't and I hope we get access to these files because the story they'll tell, I guarantee you, will knock your socks off way worse than what's going to be in the documents that get released as part of the dump from Judge Presco. There's a lot being made about those documents and a lot of the people pushing that sort of nonsense, they have ulterior motives. There's a lot of folks out there with 50, 80, 100,000 followers on Twitter who I have never even seen or heard of talking about the Epstein case. And now all of a sudden there's some kind of authority and there's a list coming out all of a sudden. I mean, it's just, it's all bananas to me. And if you really want to know the really real the court documents, that's where it's all going to be at. Read the court documents and listen to what the survivors say. All the other is noise in my opinion. So hopefully we get these records and we can go through them ourselves, cut out the middleman and and try and get to the bottom of what the hell happened down in Palm Beach. Alright folks, that's gonna do it for this one. All of the information that goes with this episode can be found in the description box. What's up everyone and welcome back to the Epstein Chronicles. On today's episode, we're gonna talk about the grand Jury documents from Palm beach and how they are one step closer now to being unsealed. And those grand jury documents are going to tell us a whole hell of a lot about Jeffrey Epstein's first prosecution. Remember, they chose to go to the grand jury to get that prosecution. They wanted all of this behind closed doors. What was the prosecution hiding? And why did they want a slam dunk such as this to be conducted behind closed doors? And then, remember, they only had one witness come and give testimony. You can literally get a ham sandwich indicted in front of a grand jury. And yet these two nods, they couldn't figure it out. One of the most prolific molesters in the history of our country, and these idiots couldn't figure out a way to really nail him to the wall. So was it because they're just bad at their job, or was it because Jeffrey Epstein had so many contacts and so many friends in high places? I think that the release of the grand jury documents, while it won't answer all of those questions, it certainly will give us some insight into what was going on in that grand jury room. That should have never been a situation that was in front of a grand jury. Something like this needs to see the light of day. Remember, transparency breeds trust, and there hasn't been any transparency throughout this whole entire thing. And then you wonder why there's a bunch of knuckleheads running around talking about all sorts of crazy shit when it comes to Jeffrey Epstein. I mean, I've heard it all, folks. I have heard it all, and I just shake my head and keep it moving. I don't have time to deal with all of that. If other people want to talk about that, that's up to them. But really, I don't even blame people who talk about conspiracies here. I. I blame the government. They can nip all this shit in the bud if they just be transparent, but they refuse to do it. So why are they not being transparent? And why do they want to do everything behind closed doors? Today's article is from wpbf and the headline, Epstein Grand Jury Documents One Step Closer to being Unsealed. And you know, when they get unsealed, we'll be reading them live here on air. A bill sponsored by Palm beach county legislators to unseal grand jury documents in Jeffrey Epstein's case unanimously passed its first committee.
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Stop.
Epstein Case Commentator
Good on Florida and good on all of these policymakers to understand that this is bigger than politics. There were people from all over the political sphere when it comes to Jeffrey Epstein trying to enrich themselves. Sure, some had more contact with them and deeper ties, but there were people from every walk of political life in bed with this scumbag. This article was authored by Taylor Hernandez. A bill sponsored by Palm beach county legislators to unseal grand jury documents in Jeffrey Epstein's case unanimously passed its first committee stop. The Florida House criminal justice subcommittee voted 180 to send the legislation on to the second of three committee stops before it would move to the full House. Now, imagine being the person that signs off against this. Yeah, you know what? I don't think we should have Jeffrey Epstein's documents released to the public. The second someone says that or votes
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that way, right away, I'm digging into
Epstein Case Commentator
them and I'm thinking and. And under the impression that they had some ties to Jeffrey Epstein somewhere down the road. Because no right thinking person, no reasonable person would object to these documents being presented to the public and a little bit of transparency being shown here. The legislation sponsored by Boca Raton Representative Peggy Gossett Seidman, would create a narrowly tailored exception to, to Florida's grand jury rules. Look, you can't release all of the grand jury documents for every case, right? But this is a case that happened how long ago? There's no national security secrets here. So if you have to craft a special bill for this to occur, then that's what you do. You've had over 15 years to figure this shit out. I would think that you guys would have it all locked in by now. While grand juries do not vote on innocence versus guilt, the proceedings are secret and documents are sealed for the protection of witnesses. My personal opinion is that grand juries in general are a sham. I don't think that there should ever be a court in session where the defendant doesn't have representation. Things can go south quickly. You've seen some of the yahoos who are the foremans of these juries, some of these knuckleheads. And the saying is true, a grand jury will indict a ham sandwich. And that's because they're only getting one side of the story. And as far as the witness goes, well, you can redact that, you can seal that, but the story must be told. In this case, we're seeking testimony from someone who is deceased and someone in a situation which involved minors. Seidman said there should be no discussion, no debate, no anything. But here we are, all these years later, all of this grandstanding and still no movement. These grand jury documents should have been released literally a long time ago. The second they were asked for the Second, they were requested by the media down here in Palm Beach. Those documents should have been handed over. We the people have a right to know what's going on in these courtrooms. And if people want to trust and. And just shrug their shoulders and think the government's doing the right thing all the time, that's fine. But me personally, I just don't believe it. And I don't trust them. I've had my own experiences with the federal government. I've seen the way they go after people. I see the way they treat people. And do you notice everybody else gets a perp walk, right? Epstein never got a perp walk. They made sure to raid my grandfather's pad when all of his neighbors would be home. That way they could maximize the embarrassment. But when you're Jeffrey Epstein or somebody like that, no way. The last thing they're going to do is embarrass one of their buddies. Somebody has to still pay the bills, right? Though it does not mention him by name. This legislation would only apply in Epstein's case. I think that's fine. It should be a case by case basis. I don't want to hear this shit. Oh, we can't release this or we can't release that. Who says you can't release it? Aren't you the lawmakers? Aren't you the ones making the law? So what are you talking about right now with the whole, I can't release it, go change the law, amend it, and let's get cracking. It certainly seemed not only appropriate, but something that needed to be done. Seidman said, Then we can maybe look at other grand jury things down the road and maybe there should be more. Public's right to know 100 per cent. It would provide a path for Palm Beach County Clerk Joseph Abruzzo to release the records. Abruzzo released a statement in support of the legislation that reads, in part, I strongly believe that changing the law to allow this limited release of grand jury records with the judge's order is the best course of action. Everybody's on board at this point. So if it doesn't get released, then you know for sure that the fix is in. And whoever makes that call boy, I'd like to have a chat with him right here on this podcast. State Attorney Dave Aronberg sent this statement to WBPF 25 News today. Our office supports transparency, which is why three years ago, we posted all the public records from the investigation and prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein online. They did do that. These public records can be accessed through our website. The case occurred several years and multiple State Attorney administrations before I took office in 2013. I have never seen or had access to Epstein's grand jury documents as the State Attorney's office has never possessed them. I applaud Clerk Abruzzo for his push for transparency. I will continue to have no objection to the Clerk's release of the Epstein grand jury documents. So that's huge. Having Aronberg sign off on it as well. That's a big step, folks. A big step for transparency. And while we might not ever get the prosecutions that this case so deserves, at least we're gonna get to embarrass these scumbags who thought that they were gonna be able to run for the hills. But guess what? The north remembers.
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Epstein Case Commentator
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Epstein Case Commentator
An identical piece of legislation sponsored by Boca Raton Senator Tina Polsky is set to start moving through the Senate on Tuesday. So they have two pieces of legislation making their way through the Senate and the House and through all of these committee stops. And both of the bills have to do with these grand jury documents finally being released. And I'll tell you what, I'm super pumped about the fact that we might get a look at these. I've wanted to look at these grand jury documents ever since I started looking at this case overall. And as we all know, at this point, the court documents are a blueprint to finding out the information that you're looking for. And when it comes to the grand jury down in Palm beach, when Jeffrey Epstein was first arrested, there are so many questions, and for all of these years, so few answers. So anytime we can get more transparency here, you know that I'm on board. So we'll see what happens. We'll keep our eye on it like usual. And when we get some movement one way or the other, and especially when they get released, we'll have them here on the podcast and. And we'll go through them together. All right, everybody, that's going to do it for this one. All of the information that goes with the episode can be found in the description box.
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What's up, everyone? And welcome to another episode of the Epstein Chronicles. So the Department of Justice is going to get their wish, and some of these grand jury materials that have to do with Jeffrey Epstein and Glenn Maxwell down in Florida will be released. Now, we don't know exactly when that will occur, but. But we know the deadline is December 19th, so I'm guessing between sometime and now we're going to get a look at these things. So today we have an article from the AP which is very short. And then after the article, I'm going to dive into what I think about the release and where it ends up. So let's dive into that article. And like I said, this article was published by AP and the headline, grand Jury Transcripts from Abandoned Epstein Investigation in Florida Ordered Released. This article was authored by Bridget Brown, Michael Warren, Curtis Yee no Clark, and Peter Orsi. And considering this is like, three paragraphs long, what did each one of them do? A paragraph. A federal judge Friday gave the Justice Department permission to release transcripts of a grand jury investigation into Jeffrey Epstein's abuse of underage girls. And in Florida, a case that ultimately ended without any federal charges being filed against the millionaire sex offender. U.S. district Judge Rodney Smith said a recently passed federal law ordering the release of records related to the cases overrode a federal rule prohibiting the release of matters before a grand jury. The law signed last month by President Donald Trump compels the Justice Department, FBI, and federal prosecutors to to release later this month the vast trove of material they have amassed during the investigations into Epstein. When the documents will be released is unknown. The government had asked the court for permission to include the usually secret grand jury records in the files that are required to make public under the new federal law known as the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The Justice Department hasn't set a timetable for when it plans to start releasing information, but the law set a deadline of December 19th. All right, so that's the article. Here's what I think. This ruling from Judge Rodney Smith is one of those moments that feels quiet on paper but loud on impact, the kind of legal move that doesn't scream headline drama but hums with long term consequences. The DOJ asked for the Epstein and Maxwell grand jury documents out of Florida, almost certainly expecting the usual slow walk, the usual procedural fog, the usual careful nodding toward precedent while nothing actually happens. Instead, Smith essentially said the ground rules have changed and pretending otherwise is dishonest. Congress rewrote the landscape with the Epstein bill, and that legislation now matters. It overrides the old reflexive secrecy surrounding grand jury material in this specific context, and that alone makes this ruling a genuine inflection point, whether the DOJ likes it or not. For decades, grand jury secrecy has been the government's favorite bunker, a reinforced place where uncomfortable stories are stored and quietly forgotten. It's where institutional embarrassment goes to hibernate under layers of legal jargon and solemn warnings about process. It's also where accountability goes to suffocate. So when a judge openly acknowledges that Congress deliberately carved out an exception for Epstein related material, it's not just a technical ruling. It's a visible crack in a wall that's been cemented since the days when federal power operated with near total deference and zero public oversight. And what makes this especially interesting, and frankly, funny in a dark way, is how badly timed it is for the DOJ themselves. They were very clearly angling for delay for more time for another procedural off ramp. And as I've told you a million times, delay is the oldest trick in the institutional survival playbook. You don't say no, you say later, and then you keep saying it until the public attention shifts somewhere else. Judge Smith didn't play along. He moved the chess piece forward when the DOJ hoped the board would stay frozen. Now the DOJ has to reckon with the possibility that whatever lives inside those grand jury records doesn't just reinforce Epstein's guilt, but Highlights government failure in vivid detail. This isn't about convicting a dead man. It's about exposing the systems that failed while he was very much alive and operating freely. And that kind of exposure doesn't fade with time. It compounds. But hold up. Let me pump the brakes real quick and slow down a bit, because expectations are already getting overheated online. Like people thinking this is going to be a cinematic review, There's a growing assumption that. That these documents will be explosive, that names will pour out, that everything will finally snap into place. History suggests otherwise. Grand jury transcripts are often procedural, messy, incomplete, and deeply frustrating. They reflect decisions already made behind the scenes, not the full truth that people imagine exists somewhere, waiting to be discovered. That doesn't mean they're worthless. Far from it. The value here lies in context, not fireworks. The power of these documents will come from seeing what questions were asked, which ones weren't, and how aggressively or passively evidence was treated. If anything damaging emerges, it'll be revealed through tone and omission, not through shocking admissions. And this is where the danger for the DOJ really lives. Not in some salacious detail, but in the exposure of indifference, timidity, or institutional cowardice. It's one thing to issue a statement saying resources were limited or priorities differed. It's another thing to have transcripts showing opportunities ignored, leads deflected, or victims treated like inconveniences. There's also a heavy irony here that should not be missed. The DOJ wanted control over timing, framing, and optics. That control is now slipping. Once a court acknowledges that secrecy is no longer absolutely. Every attempt to resist disclosure starts to look like obstruction. And in the Epstein context, the public has been trained by experience to interpret resistance as concealment. People also need to understand this isn't just about Epstein and Maxwell. In isolation, these documents sit inside a much larger pattern where elite defendants are buffered from consequences in ways regular people never are. The story being told here is structural, not individual. Epstein didn't succeed because he was clever. He succeeded because the system made room for him. So when these documents are unsealed, I suspect we'll see a lot of prosecutorial caution disguised as professionalism. You'll see careful language, narrowed scopes, jurisdictional hedges, and endless justifications for inaction. All technically defensible, but also all hollow when weighed against the scale of the harm that was allowed to continue. And there's also very real potential for blowback against the FBI. Specifically, if the grand jury material shows evidence that agents sat on information under prioritized victims or Slow walked referrals. That's another serious blow to an institution that's already bleeding credibility. The Epstein case has become a cultural stress test, and federal law enforcement keeps failing it. Transparency, though, remains the correct position. Always. Even when it's uncomfortable? Especially when it's uncomfortable. You don't repair trust by insisting people calm down or wait patiently while the same institutions explain themselves. Again, trust is rebuilt through visibility, not messaging. And look, Judge Smith deserves credit for recognizing that this moment is fundamentally different. Congress didn't pass the Epstein bill as a symbolic gesture. They passed it because the normal safeguards and procedures didn't protect anyone who mattered. Ignoring that intent would have been judicial negligence, wrapped in restraint. And let's be honest, if the DOJ truly believed these documents would make them look competent or diligent, they wouldn't have sought this delay. They'd be welcoming disclosure. The hesitation speaks volumes. Silence is a message, especially in a case like this. And now, look, this doesn't mean that every prosecutor involved acted maliciously or with ill intent. Bureaucracies don't require villains to produce disastrous outcomes. They thrive on inertia, risk avoidance, and protecting careers over people. Epstein didn't break the system. He used it exactly as it was built to be used. And what this ruling does more than anything else, is force the system to look at itself. Without filters. No curated summaries, no selectively released excerpts. Just records showing how justice was approached when it actually mattered. Now, of course, people that are looking for shock and spectacle might walk away underwhelmed. People looking for accountability will not. Accountability tends to be slow, deeply unflattering, and procedural. And this ruling sends a warning shot beyond Epstein. It tells federal institutions that Congress can and will intervene when secrecy becomes a shield for failure. That precedent is bigger than this case, and it shouldn't be ignored. Because at the end of the day, this isn't about feeding curiosity. It's about record. History is written from documents, not from press conferences. For years, the DOJ benefited from controlling the paper trail. That grip just loosened. So, yes, let the documents come out. Let them be mundane, damning, confusing, and. And depressing. Let professionals and the public sort through them without a babysitter narrating what they're allowed to think. If the DOJ ends up looking bad, that's not injustice. That's consequence. Because I think I speak for everybody who's following along when I say that we've had enough narrative management in this case, Enough promises of future accountability, enough fog. If this ruling pushes us even slightly closer to understanding how something this disgusting was allowed to persist in plain sight. Then it's overdue. Now, I'd caution about popping the champagne right now, but the transparency party is finally starting. Even if it's years late and morally mandatory. The DOJ won't be judged by what Epstein did, but by what they didn't do. That's the reckoning hiding in the transcripts. And it's why resistance came so fast and so quietly. Exposure doesn't need the theatrics. What it needs is records. Transparency is not going to heal anything on its own. It's not going to bring relief, and it's not going to undo the harm. But it does strip away the last excuses. Once the facts are public, the pretending has to stop. The myths collapse. The press releases age like milk. So let it land. Let the lawyers spin and the agency squirm. Let the documents speak in their own dull, devastating way. Accountability rarely arrives with fireworks. Most of the time, it shows up as paperwork everyone prayed would stay sealed. All of the information that goes with this episode can be found in the description box. What's up, everyone? And welcome back to the Epstein Chronicles. Now that we've all had a chance to take a look or listen to the new grand jury transcripts that have been released, I think it's time for some commentary. And boy, oh boy, do I have a few things to say. Now, according to the judge who released these documents, he called Jeffrey Epstein the most infamous pedophile in American history. And I agree with that wholeheartedly. It's unfortunate, however, that the authorities in Florida during this first prosecution felt a completely different way. And they can say whatever they want. They can try and rewrite history.
Epstein Case Commentator
They.
Podcast Host
They can make pretend that everything was on the up and up, everything was all good. And to slam that point home, they had the OIG report into the NPA because, you know, that did so much good. Unlike most other people, we've actually been through that report from front to back. So all of you are hip to what's going on. And that is the whole entire point of going through the court documents so that you folks have have a complete understanding of what's going on. If you're looking for little three minute blurbs here, that's not what we do. We dive into these topics and it's long form. And if you're not willing to put in the legwork, then you're never going to understand what the hell's going on. And honestly, that was the genius of the whole entire operation by Epstein and his people. They made it so complex, they made
Epstein Case Commentator
it so wrapped up within itself and,
Podcast Host
and within actual institutions that it's very, very difficult to try and unfurl what happened here.
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to play social casino void where prohibited. Visit spinquest.com for more details. And if you don't have all the information, forget it. This isn't a scratch the surface story where you can, you know, watch a 15 minute show on CNN or something and understand what's going on. Not if you truly want to understand what's going on anyway.
Epstein Case Commentator
So for those of you who have
Podcast Host
been here rocking with me for all these years, you get it. You understand exactly what's going on now. And considering the avalanche of emails I've received lately, the vast majority of you are not happy about what went down. And the sad part is, the real thumb in the eye is that nobody's ever going to be held accountable. What do you think Krisher and Bella Hovlik and the rest of them are going to be held responsible now, 20 years later? 20 something years later, it's just not feasible.
Epstein Case Commentator
Now.
Podcast Host
If I was in charge, it would be. I would find a way. Oh, they find a way to figure everything else out, right? If they're looking to get you, they'll figure it out. But when it's one of their buddies, when it's someone in the system, well, they can't do that, can they? They just have to make pretend that, oh well, it was negligent, but it wasn't on purpose. It had nothing to do with the fact that Jeffrey Epstein was well connected. I mean, this dude, if you go through the NPA report like we did, it tells you right in that report that Epstein's lawyers were meeting with the
Epstein Case Commentator
top dogs from the doj.
Podcast Host
And then that report has the audacity to go on and say that it had nothing to do with how things went, as if Alex Acosta is making these decisions on his own. And I think that the more documents that are released, the more it's apparent that that's what went down. And I've been saying that from the very beginning.
Epstein Case Commentator
This all cracked off because Julie K.
Podcast Host
Brown wanted to look into Acosta, but because he got hired by Trump. Then from there, obviously, it ballooned.
Epstein Case Commentator
But why did it stop at Alex Acosta?
Podcast Host
Why didn't Julie K. Brown keep going all the way up to the top to where this originated, especially after seeing the documents. The NPA was signed by the Deputy Attorney General, Mark Philippe. So what, you think that Mukase had nothing to do with that? That just happened in a vacuum? Those guys make those decisions.
Epstein Case Commentator
These bureaucrats stop it.
Podcast Host
That is not how this works. And anybody who tells you that that's how the bureaucracy works. They don't know what they're talking about. So for me, the biggest takeaway from these documents, when they drop, they act as receipts and they just back up everything that I've been telling you folks
Epstein Case Commentator
for all these years.
Podcast Host
And guess what? I stand on my work. And whereas other people want to rush to get information out, I'm more interested in making sure I'm getting out the right information. So with that said, let's dive into this article from CBS News and let's see what they have for us. Florida judge calls Epstein the most infamous pedophile in American history following transcripts release. Well, yeah, dude was point blank, period. Nothing to conversate about there, bro. Was out here doing shit that is just unspeakable. And what you've been privy to, the information you've heard is, is just the tip of the iceberg. I know people don't want to hear it. People don't want to listen to that, but it's the truth. You know how many unnamed women and girls are out there, mainly from different countries, who are taken advantage of by these scumbags. As for an author of this article, there isn't one listed, so I'm guessing it's staffed. A Florida judge released Monday afternoon the Transcripts of a 2006 grand jury investigation that looked into the sex trafficking and rape allegations made against the late millionaire and financier. You mean pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. The investigation was the first of many by law enforcement over the past two decades into Epstein's rape and sex trafficking of teenagers and how his ties to the rich and powerful seem to have allowed him to avoid prison or serious jail term over a decade? Not seem to. That's exactly what went down. Look, there's a reason why somebody like R. Kelly gets hit with rico. There is a reason why Ray Neary gets hit with rico. There's a reason why young thug gets hit with rico. And there is a reason why Jeffrey Epstein does Not. And that reason is Epstein and his finances are intertwined with all of these politicians and bankers. So if you hit him with rico, everybody gets pulled in. They couldn't have that, could they? They couldn't have, you know, just how deep all of this went because their faves might be exposed, you know, like Stacy Plaskett. The investigations uncovered Epstein's close ties to former President Bill Clinton and Britain's Prince Andrew, as well as his once friendly relationship with former President Donald Trump and numerous others of wealth and influence who have denied doing anything criminal or improper and not been charged. Well, yeah, because it's okay to just hang out with a pedophile because everybody in your friend group would look at you and be like, ah, you know what? You just didn't know. Breaking news. Everybody knew. Ok, stop the bullshit. Circuit Judge Luis Delgado's release of approximately 150 pages Monday came as a surprise since there was scheduled hearings next week over unsealing the graphic testimony. Governor Ron DeSantis had signed a bill in February allowing the release on Monday or any time thereafter that Delgado ordered. Florida grand jury transcripts are usually kept secret forever, but, but the bill created an exemption for cases like Epstein's. And the whole reason they went to the grand jury is so that they could do this, so that they could hide what they did as far as their work product from all of us. Now look, if this is a white collar crime or this dude got nailed for DUI or something and he's flexing and he's using his connections, I expect that to happen. And in fact I just shake my head and keep it moving. That's the way it works when you're powerful, you have money, you have connections, you have, you can get off on some. This shouldn't be something that you're getting off on because you have connections, because you have friends who are in powerful positions or because you have money, bro, you hurt little kids, point blank, period. The sentencing should be severe, but instead if you're Jeffrey Epstein down in Florida, you get to do whatever you want. And not only that, but you get this non prosecution agreement that saved Sarah Kellen Vickers. Everybody talks about Sarah Kellen Vickers this, Sarah Kellen Vickers that. But basically all of her crimes that she committed allegedly happened in Florida. And that NPA protects anyone who was up the bullshit down in Florida. Notice that they charged Ghislaine Maxwell in New York. And it's amazing to me, all these years later, people still don't understand how any of this works. They must not be listening to this podcast, because at this point, all of you are experts. The transcripts show that the grand jury heard testimony that Epstein was, who was then in his 40s, had raped teenage girls as young as 14 at his palm beach mansion, often paying them so he could commit statutory rape or assault. The teenagers testified and told detectives they were also paid cash or rented cars if they found him.
Epstein Case Commentator
Or girls.
Podcast Host
And the audacity of the prosecutors and those people sitting on the grand jury to attack those girls the way they did it was absurd. Imagine going after your own witnesses like that. I mean, there has to be some kind of punishment, or at the very least, this has to be taught in the curriculum of what not to do. The details in the record will be outrageous to decent people. Delgado wrote in his order. The testimony taken by the grand jury concerns activity ranging from grossly unacceptable to rape. All of the conduct at issue is sexually deviant, disgusting and criminal. And that's a judge saying that, okay, not me. That's not me and my big mouth just yapping.
Epstein Case Commentator
That's what everybody who's ever got a
Podcast Host
look at this has had to say. But somehow, some way, everybody involved hasn't been arrested. Everybody involved hasn't been taken down. And once again, we'll have to circle back, like the press secretary loves to say, and get back to the very beginning. And this is where it all started. This is the genesis, folks.
Epstein Case Commentator
The fact that he was able to
Podcast Host
get off here really told the tale for the future. And if you're not going to arrest this guy for raping 14 year olds, what are you going to arrest him for? In 2008, Epstein cut a deal with South Florida federal prosecutors that allowed him to escape more severe federal charges and instead plead guilty to state charges of procuring a person under 18 for prostitution and solicitation of prostitution. Imagine one of your friends showed up and, and this is what they got nailed for. And you're like, ah, you know what? Come over to Thanksgiving dinner. I got news for you. There's a lot I can forgive. In fact, I have friends that have done time for murder. I've forgiven them when it comes to this. Nope, can't forgive it. Sorry. If you're hurting children, you're hurting women. If you're a deviant sexual abuser, there is no fixing you. There's no rehabilitation, there's no extenuating circumstances. You're just a sick fuck and you need to be dealt with. And if we don't have any helicopters or volcanoes available, how about we get a wood chipper ready. He was sentenced to one and a half years in the Palm beach county jail system, during which he was allowed to go to his office almost daily. An office that didn't exist, by the way, until he was arrested. So keep that in mind. As part of a work release program
Epstein Case Commentator
followed by a year of house arrest,
Podcast Host
he was required to register as a sex offender, not New Mexico. He wasn't. And as far as his house arrest, not the same kind of house arrest you or I would have, that's for goddamn sure. And it's amazing, all these years later, the legacy media still doesn't get it. They still do not understand this story. Criticism of the deal resulted in the 2019 resignation of Trump Labor Secretary Alex Acosta, who was the U.S. attorney for South Florida in 2008 and signed off on the deal. Well, he put his name to it. Did he really sign off on the deal, though? And I think that's something that Julie K. Brown needs to answer for. Like, she needs to go back and reevaluate, or maybe she's just trying to protect people. Maybe that's it. I don't know. But you would think that if you're gonna go this far and you're going to unearth what Acosta was up to, you would keep it going all the way up the chain. Because we all know that middle managers. Well, they're just middle managers. They're not people out here making these decisions. And if it was Acosta who made the decisions, why was Dershowitz, Starr and Left Court having dinners and shit with Mukazi and other honchos at the doj? What were they talking about, their golf swing? Talking about the next big soiree at the Bilderberg Conference? Or were they formulating a plan to make sure that they get their guy Jeffrey Epstein off and keep their hands clean while doing it? I'll let you figure that out. A 2020 Justice Department investigation concluded that Acosta used poor judgment in his handling of the Epstein prosecution, but it didn't rise to the level of professional misconduct. Well, it didn't. I know people don't like to hear that. And Acosta is a worm. There is no doubt. BRO is an absolute coward.
Epstein Case Commentator
But to act like he's the man
Podcast Host
here, the guy that deserves all the criticism, all the scorn, is letting the people who really had this all in motion off the hook. And if you want to do that to score political points, that's on you. I refuse to do it. Alex Acosta is just a small piece to all of this. If you really want to be mad at people, you need to go to the people that were in charge at the DOJ at the time, and that's Michael Mukazi and Mark Philippe.
Epstein Case Commentator
Those two dudes were at the sticks,
Podcast Host
they were at the controls, and for me, that's where the responsibility falls. The chief prosecutor in the Epstein case, former Palm Beach County State Attorney Barry Krisher, did not immediately respond Monday to email and voicemail seeking comment about the transcripts. Current Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg, who was not involved in the investigation, said in a statement that he is glad the records have been released.
Epstein Case Commentator
He said he had not yet read
Podcast Host
the transcripts, so he cannot comment on whether Krischer should have pursued a tougher prosecution of Epstein. How is it that you haven't read those transcripts yet? They come out down in your district? Probably a good idea to take a look at them. Brad Edwards, an attorney for many of the victims, said in a statement that the transcripts show that Krisher's office took the case to the grand jury with an agenda to return minimal, if any, criminal charges against Jeffrey Epstein. A fraction of the evidence was presented in a misleading way and the office betrayed the victims as criminals, he said. It's so sad, the number of victims Epstein was able to abuse because the state carried water for him when they
Epstein Case Commentator
had a chance to put him away.
Podcast Host
Bingo, 1000%. If somebody would have listened, if somebody would have done their job well, Jeffrey Epstein would have went on to abuse as many girls as he did.
Epstein Case Commentator
But since the state of Florida and
Podcast Host
the Department of Justice had other ideas, here we are, and if I was one of these survivors, you better believe I'd be suing the Department of Justice. Epstein's estate is paying 155 million in restitution to more than 125 victims, according to the transcripts. Palm Beach Police Detective Joe ricari testified in July 2006 that the initial investigation began when a Woman reported in March 2005 that her stepdaughter, who was in high school at the time, said she received $300 in exchange for sexual activity with a man in Palm Beach. Ricari testified another teenager, whose name was redacted in the transcript, told detectives that she was 17 years old when she was approached by a friend who said she could make $200 by providing a massage at Epstein's home. At the house, when Epstein tried touching her, she told him she was uncomfortable. He then told her that he would pay her $200 if she brought girls to the house he told her the younger the better, ricari said. Over time she brought six friends to Epstein's house, including a 14 year old and and likened herself to Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss. In October 2005 interviews, Recari recounted when she brought over a 23 year old friend. Epstein told her that the friend was too old. The more you did, the more money you made, the detective said. The teen told him. She explained that there was going to be a massage or some possible touching and you would have to provide the massage either topless or naked. Another teen testified she visited Epstein's house hundreds of times in the early 2000s, starting when she was 16. She testified that Epstein paid her $200 each time she gave him a massage while naked, rented her a car and gave her a thousand dollars the time that he raped her because you know that makes it all better, that makes her a prostitute and it makes it not rape.
Epstein Case Commentator
That's basically what these prosecutors say and
Podcast Host
that's certainly the beat that Epstein was dancing to. A 2005 police search of Epstein's mansion through found evidence supporting the girl's testimony. Also, Epstein's houseman told detectives that the teenagers who came to the mansion were very young, too young to be a Masseuse. Epstein in 2018 was charged with federal sex trafficking crimes in New York, where he also had a mansion that was a scene of abuse, after the Miami Herald published a series of articles that renewed public attention to the case, including interviews with some of the victims who had been pursuing civil lawsuits against him. Epstein was 66 when he killed himself in a New York City jail cell in August 2019.
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Podcast Host
Spin Quest is a free to play social casino void where prohibited. Visit spinquest.com for more details. Federal officials say Delgado in his order wrote that the transcript show why Epstein was the most infamous pedophile in American history. For almost 20 years, the story of how Jeffrey Epstein victimized some of the Palm Beach County's most vulnerable has been the subject of much anger and has at times diminished the public's perception of the criminal justice system, delgado wrote. At times. No, all the Time. I don't know how anyone can look at what happened down in Florida and
Epstein Case Commentator
not be pissed off, because all of
Podcast Host
it is a travesty. Imagine if this was your kid. Imagine if these were kids that were from a family with money. None of this would have ever happened. The person responsible would already be in jail. But since these girls were vulnerable, since they came from, you know, poor backgrounds or whatever, ah, who cares?
Epstein Case Commentator
At the time, that's what they thought.
Podcast Host
Well, they could have never imagined that all this time later, that everybody cares now. And not only do we care, now that we have the receipts to back
Epstein Case Commentator
up what we thought, I think it's
Podcast Host
time that the hammer gets brought down
Epstein Case Commentator
on all of the prosecutors that were
Podcast Host
involved in this abomination. Now, I doubt that's going to occur, but that's what should happen. You really think a guy like Barry Krisher or Abela Hovlik should be sitting around and collecting their, you know, retirement that's being paid by the state taxpayer after they were derelict in their duty?
Epstein Case Commentator
So I doubt that there's going to
Podcast Host
be a lever to get pulled to fix that. But we all know that they shouldn't be drawing a pension at this point. Considering what happened here, I would say that that should be the least of the penalties that they get hit with. But unfortunately, if I take a in my hand and put everything I want in the other hand, well, what am I going to have more of at the end of the day? So with that in mind, the battle continues. But this episode has come to an end. All of the information that goes with this episode can be found in the description box. Oh, I have had no luck lately. Wait. Lady Luck Bretzky. I got you. I've had so much luck on spinquest.com they have all of my favorite games,
Epstein Case Commentator
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Podcast: The Epstein Chronicles
Host: Bobby Capucci
Episode Date: May 31, 2026
This "mega edition" episode of The Epstein Chronicles dives deep into the recent unsealing of Florida grand jury documents related to Jeffrey Epstein's first criminal investigation and prosecution in Palm Beach County. Host Bobby Capucci analyzes the legislative battles, judiciary rulings, public reactions, and pivotal insights that these records reveal about systemic failure, institutional protection, and the elusive quest for accountability in the Epstein case.
The episode also critiques media narratives, government transparency, and underscores the massive consequences of the newly released records — not just for historical clarity, but for public trust in the justice system.
“If you really want justice in this case and you really want to make sure people are held accountable, we’ll get these grand jury documents unsealed.”
— Bobby Capucci (03:45)
"There is so much nonsense surrounding this case and so much bullshit that they should be falling all over themselves to provide clarity." — Bobby Capucci (10:30)
“The value here lies in context, not fireworks. The power of these documents will come from seeing what questions were asked, which ones weren't, and how aggressively or passively evidence was treated.”
— Bobby Capucci (34:15)
“If you’re not going to arrest this guy for raping 14-year-olds, what are you going to arrest him for?”
— Bobby Capucci (50:21)
“They should be falling all over themselves to provide clarity… If you want to stop people from saying ‘Jeffrey Epstein didn’t kill himself,’ well, provide some evidence.”
— Bobby Capucci (10:30)
On the predictable missing evidence & disappearing files:
“Why is it that everything that has to do with Jeffrey Epstein when it comes to files or videos, it just happens to disappear?... I guess it’s all just a coincidence, right?”
— Bobby Capucci (11:35)
On the scope of institutional failure:
“Epstein didn’t succeed because he was clever. He succeeded because the system made room for him.”
— Bobby Capucci (36:58)
On legislative resistance:
“No right-thinking person, no reasonable person would object to these documents being presented to the public and a little bit of transparency being shown here.”
— Bobby Capucci (20:44)
On justice for victims:
“If somebody would have listened, if somebody would have done their job well, Jeffrey Epstein would have went on to abuse as many girls as he did.”
— Bobby Capucci (55:03)
On selectivity in law enforcement:
“Everybody else gets a perp walk, right? Epstein never got a perp walk... The last thing they’re going to do is embarrass one of their buddies.”
— Bobby Capucci (21:36)
| Time | Topic/Quote | |--------------|---------------------------------------------------| | 00:42–07:00 | The primacy of Florida grand jury evidence | | 07:00–12:00 | Legislative action; need for open records | | 13:28–20:30 | Political & legal signals for transparency | | 29:03–40:00 | Federal ruling; the limits and promise of the release | | 40:54–59:30 | Review of transcripts, outrage, victims’ voices | | 55:03 | “If somebody would have listened...” |
The episode closes with Capucci stressing that, although these document releases likely won’t bring prosecutions, they are crucial for historical record, public insight, and holding systems—if not individuals—accountable.
The court records reveal procedural failures, prosecutorial indifference, victim-blaming, and the continued rot protecting the elite. Capucci makes clear that accountability is slow and unglamorous; it's about exposing the paperwork everyone hoped would stay buried, and it's only with public scrutiny that institutions can be pressured into change.
“Once the facts are public, the pretending has to stop. The myths collapse. The press releases age like milk. So let it land... Accountability rarely arrives with fireworks. Most of the time, it shows up as paperwork everyone prayed would stay sealed.”
— Bobby Capucci (38:50)