
The U.S. Virgin Islands’ battle against Jeffrey Epstein’s estate was contentious from the beginning because it was not just a fight over money; it was a fight over accountability, secrecy, and control of Epstein’s remaining assets. After Epstein’s...
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Lamine Yamal steps into McDonald's, looks left, sees Pulisic, looks right, sees Jimenez, gives a nod to Ronaldinho in the corner with a FIFA World cup meal. Ronaldinho sees son in the booth. Son finds Beckham going for extra Big Mac sauce. He's got Davies at the table just behind him. Davey's going for his collectible cup. A steal by Henry, who pulls his own collectible cup. Collect one of nine legendary cups with a FIFA World cup meal at participating McDonald's for a limited time while supplies last. All rights reserved. 20:26 McDonald's at FIFA World Cup 20:26
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Darren Endyke and Richard Khan 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 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 a struggle. And still to this day, Indyke and Khan are not doing the 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. It's offensive 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 survivors feel about it. 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. Maybe if they're indicted, they'll have to be removed.
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I don't know.
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Honestly, I don't know how any of this stuff really works when it comes to executors of an estate or anything like that.
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This is all new to me as
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well, and we're all trying to work our way through it, right? But it seems to me that if these two dudes have the cloud of, of responsibility in some regard 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, to make sure that they are no longer involved because they have proven themselves time and time again as obstinate as not wanting to make things move in a quick manner and certainly not helpful. So when it comes to Khan and Indyke, I'm very, very, very clear about how I feel. These dudes have no business being anywhere near this case, nevermind as executors.
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And our article today is going to
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go into that just a little bit.
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This is an article from the Miami Herald and the the headline is Executors
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of Jeffrey Epstein Estate Ask Virgin Islands Judge to Seal More Records. The author of the article is Kevin G. Hall. 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 records sealed. I really 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 financier pedophile Jeffrey Epstein asked a 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 sexual abuse survivors. So why in the world would they want to have the monthly reports under seal? If they're doing the right thing and they're treating the survivors correctly and they're
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not making any dumbass stupid moves, why
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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. They should be laid bare for everybody to see. They have obviously admitted to wrongdoing by Jeffrey Epstein or they wouldn't be involved in this compensation fund. Okay, so that means I don't want to hear anything about privacy anymore from the estate. It all should be laid bare. In a 24 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 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 with people like in Dyke and Khan. But I'm not gonna hold my breath. In order to maintain the confidentiality of the program's administrator's monthly reports as agreed to by the Attorney General and claimants counsel. Given the importance of maintaining an effective confidential at claimant's sold discretion mechanism to provide compensation to those who suffered sexual abuse at Mr. Epstein's hands, the co executors seek the court's approval to submit the program administrator's monthly under seal, said the request from Darren K. Indyke and Richard Kahn respectively, the chief lawyer and accountant for the Epstein estate. It is so ridiculous that 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 of that here. What are you so scared of? 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 eyeful 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 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, the people, the symbiotes and the, 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 they want the clicks. But some people, well they'll, they're never gonna believe what happened here because the secrecy of the media. The Epstein Survivors Compensation Fund officially opened its doors on June 25 and its new program administrator Jordana Jordi Feldman filed required monthly reports to the court on August 3 and again last week. So these are the reports that they're. They want sealed, right? Conan and I don't want these reports out for the public to consume for, for whatever reason. My guess would be is because Khan and Indyke are still up to scumbaggery. There is 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 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.
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Well that's good, right?
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If again if the claimants, the survivors, don't want their information out there, then that's, that's up to them. They have been through enough and I think that they have earned the right to some privacy at this point. Now Indyke and Khan, not so much.
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All right.
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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 let seep in. But remember, the state works for. Okay, so Indyke and Khan should not have any privacy and the estate 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 forum away from the court battles to seek a measure of financial redress for what happened to them. The filing from Indyke and Kahn said 47 individuals have submitted claims to the confidential Compensation Fund, that eight determinations have been made and individual claimants informed and that no funds have yet been distributed. The filing also said the deadline for accepting claims is March 25, 2021. So eight determinations have been made out of the 47 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. It remains confidential. So what I will say 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 claim process all shakes out. I'm not going to sit here and act like, oh, everything's going great. I have no idea.
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Right?
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All the only information I have is the same information that we're all reading right here.
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But at least it's not sitting idle.
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There has been eight determinations. Are those determinations correct? Are they going to be accepted? Who knows? We'll have to see. The issue of sealed documents has vastly complicated a number of civil suits involving Ghislaine 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 in a civil suit settled in 2017 between Maxwell and Virginia
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Roberts and Epstein's longtime accuser, who alleges
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the two trafficked underage girls for sex and abused 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 her in her criminal case. She was arrested on July 2 on charges she aided Epstein's alleged sexual crimes. Now we know that the lawyers for
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Ghislaine Maxwell have been going hard in
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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 none of it has worked. All the money she has spent on these 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 nada for them. And I really like the way that it's going. It really looks like for the first time that these people are finally on the ropes, that these people are, are finally on the run. Or as I like to say, in 2020, the Predators most assuredly have become the prey. And we see that as the court keeps handing Ls to Ghislaine Maxwell. We see people like Glenn Dubin getting subpoenaed and we see people like Darren Kahn, Richard Kahn and Darren Indyke under the microscope. Now again, remember, the grand jury is still impaneled, they are still investigating. And I would not be shocked if there are many sealed indictments that have to do with this case.
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And if Indyke and Khan or one of the other is named in one of those sealed indictments, again, I will not be shocked.
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They played a critical and crucial role in helping Jeffrey Epstein maintain his criminal sex trafficking international enterprise. Is that clear enough? Indyke 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 2019. 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. Lawyers for the, for the Epstein estate had no immediate comment, nor did Feldman's office.
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Yeah, it's not even, it's not even
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alleging at this point. It's obvious that Kahn and Indyke were part of the Epstein operation. They were part of the inner circle and, and Indike especially has his dirty fingerprints all over this case. His signature is everywhere. 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 Indyke faces the music. If you'd like to contact me, you can do that@bobby capuchirotonmail.com that's B O B B Y C A P U C c I@protonmail.com you can also find me on that festering, bubbling, oozing cesspool called Twitter at Boby Capucci. All of the links that go with this EP can be found in the description box.
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Welcome back to the Epstein Chronicles. Darren Endyke and Richard Khan shouldn't be the executors of anything. Instead, both of these dudes, in my opinion anyway, should be facing serious criminal investigations into their behavior while they were working with and for Jeffrey Epstein. We know that Darren Indyke and his signature are littered throughout all the paperwork when it comes to financial transactions, when it comes to payoffs and all of the rest of the things that you would need your in house lawyer to do. And we also know that Mr. Khan has been right there with them every step of the way, offering advice, being Jeffrey Epstein's confidant, and also helping this well oiled criminal enterprise keep operating. And I've been screaming from the rooftops for about three years now folks, about Indyke and Khan and how important they were to the operation that Epstein and Maxwell were running. And yet they're still the executors of this estate with all of the things that are hanging over their head. Especially considering we had Indike caught engaging in structuring when it comes to title 31 with all of the different trips to the ATM and to the bank, taking money out in the increments. He was taking it out so as not to trigger Title 31. That alone right there should give the Feds an in to investigate him and flip him. But for some reason, and I'll leave it up to you to decide why the Feds refused to do it. Well now down here in the Virgin Islands, Indyke and Khan and the estate of Jeffrey Epstein is being accused of moving $13 million. And why wouldn't they considering that was old hat for them and that's how they hid all of the money anyway. Do you really think Epstein only had $634 million? You really believe that's all the dough this dude had? And obviously it's a lot of money, no doubt. But let's be very real here. This dude was stashing money all over the place. That's what his M.O. was, that's who he was. So how many offshore accounts are still out there that only Indyke and Khan have access to or only Indyke and Khan know about? And you mean to tell me that neither of these dudes should be deposed? And why Is it falling on the shoulders of the U. S. Virgin Islands to carry the load here? Where's the sdny? You know, the vaunted SDNY with all of their stupid ass, loudmouth, big shot blue check marks running around Twitter all day. So that's why I find it so laughable and find it to be such a joke when people talk about client list this and client list that when we already have so many names out there that nobody has done a thing about. So when we start pulling some of these pieces off the board, get at me. And of course I'm talking about the people who have never cared about this case beforehand. Right. They only cared about it once they thought they could maneuver it politically for them. And then of course, we'll jump in, we'll have something to say about it. Where's the client list? Well, where were you for the last three and a half years when we've been in the trenches trying to get to the bottom of this? So for those of us who have followed the case, yeah, client list is something we've all really been wanting to see. And the closest we're ever going to get probably is that black book. But my biggest gripe has been and will continue to be all of these names that are out there already that nobody wants to do a thing about. And the US Virgin Islands is going to be the, the, the place to try and get justice here. I really don't have all that much faith in the motivations behind Denise George, but if she's the one to bring these guys down, more power to her. And I'm, I'm okay. I'm happy for it. Right? I don't care who does it. I don't care who ends up catching these people in the snare. But indyke, Khan, Vickers, these people have to be brought in and they have to be deposed, at the very least under oath. You mean to tell me you don't have enough to nail them? So it's going to fall on the, the Virgin Islands to continue to pursue this. I thought that the SDNY and the federal government in general was going to pursue all the co conspirators. Yeah, well, we're not too impressed with the job you're doing so far. All right, today's article is from the New York Times. And the author of this article is Matthew Goldstein. Headline executors of Jeffrey Epstein's estate are accused of moving $13 million. In a legal filing, the attorney general for the US Virgin Islands said the two men sheltered the money from the liquidation of an investment fund in which the deceased financier pedophile had a stake. So if that's the case, can we charge them criminally, please? I'm tired of all of these civil suits. The SECO case is fine. It's great. But can we get a real RICO case? I almost want to go back to school and become a prosecutor just for this one reason. Get a RICO case brought against all of these people. After. Get. After I get them all convicted. Mic drop and walk the out of the courtroom. The two executors of Jeffrey Epstein's estate, both longtime advisors to the deceased financier pedophile, could receive millions of dollars in payouts long after his death, the authorities in the US Virgin Islands said in a legal filing on Friday. You know, it's funny. You get these authors like Mr. Goldstein who will call their, you know, political rivals all sorts of names, but he doesn't even have the decency here to call Jeffrey Epstein what he is. Oh, the financier. The deceased financier. No, bitch. The pedophile, the scumbag, the piece of shit. You, the child toucher, the diddler on the roof. You know, the guy that you and your buddies in the Media protected forever, Mr. New York Times guy. The payouts to the executors, Darren Indyk and Richard Khan, are tied to the Butterfly Trust, an investment vehicle Mr. Epstein had established in 2013, according to the filing by lawyers for Denise George, Attorney General for the U. S. Virgin Islands. And look, I've given Denise George a whole heaping plateful of for going after the money the way she has, but she can redeem herself in my eyes here. If she can get a criminal conviction against Indyke and Khan, she can have some of that money as far as I'm concerned. Take the 13 million that they were going to stash, give that to the Virgin, the Virgin Islands, because somebody has to step up to the plate and do their job here. Can we really have a whole ass Justice Department with people who just don't care? Is that really where we are? It certainly seems to be the case. The court. The court filing by the Virgin Islands authorities raised questions about the transfer of millions of dollars from a trust originally set up by Mr. Epstein to several trusts that stood to benefit the executors. I mean, guys, really, are we really that naive? Is the legacy media really that naive or are they just that ignorant? Did anyone think that Epstein didn't have a whole bunch of other treasure chests buried in the sand, meaning hidden offshore? And if anyone's going to have access to it. It's going to be Indyken Khan. The whole idea is to weather this storm and. And then stuff their pockets full of money. That's their plan. I know, I'm like the. What's that lady's name? Baba. Baba Whatever her name is. The. The mind reader, The. The future teller. Yeah, I'm that lady Baba Vinga or whatever the hell her name is. You can call me that from now on, because that's exactly what these dudes are doing. The transfer of money took place nearly a year after Mr. Epstein killed himself, allegedly in his prison cell. Jail cell in Manhattan, after Ms. George's office had sued Mr. Epstein's estate. I mean, can't even get the basics right of the story. I mean. Oh, in prison? No, he was in jail. The Butterfly Trust initially received a wire transfer of $13 million in April 2020 after the liquidation of another investment fund in which Mr. Epstein had a stake, according to the filing. Some of that money was transferred again several months later to three newly created entities, two of which listed Mr. Indyke, Mr. Khan and their spouses as beneficiaries, the filing said. And when we talk about the offshore activities of Epstein, Indyke and Khan were right there with them. So they know the game, they know the hustle, and they know all of the right people in these banks to talk to. Well, you think the banks aren't taking their money? Stop it. Ms. George and her lawyers asked a Virgin Islands judge to order the estate to submit to discovery requests to make sure other estate assets have not been transferred to enrich the executors. And it's crazy, too. You think about how little in context and relatively speaking, the survivors were paid out. And when I was going on, I was yelling and screaming about that as well. How. How are you just going to pay the survivors out a 1/6th basically of what the estate is worth when they're the ones who have suffered the most? We all know gross ass Uncle Sam, meaning the federal government had their fat ass hand out to get their payday too, you know, you think they could waive that, right? What is it? One missile system to Ukraine? That's the price of waiving what the taxes would have been. But nah, screw these survivors, right? Let's just keep re victimizing them. Federal government, the media jerk offs on the Internet. Ah, why not? It's such a farce. And the fact that our federal government has continued to let it happen time and time again is just an absolute travesty. The government discovered that substantial Funds kept secret from the government were transferred for the benefit of the co executors in an apparent effort to enrich themselves and shelter these assets from recovery, the filing said. Oh, so now you guys want to do a forensic analysis, huh? How about a forensic analysis into the relationship between Jeffrey Epstein, Jess Staley? Or how about Jeffrey Epstein and Les Wexner? Oh, we're not done. All right, we'll just throw Leon Black in there. Wait, wait, hold on. There's another person you want to add? All right, come on. Glenn Dubin, you're involved now, too. Wait a minute, hold on. Didn't he donate a lot of money to the Clinton Foundation? Well, that's right, Mr. Bill and Hillary, you're on the clock, too. Meanwhile, none of that's happening, and it's all just getting swept under the rug. Mr. Endyke was Mr. Epstein's personal lawyer, and Mr. Kahn was an in house accountant. Daniel Weiner, a lawyer for the estate, said the executors categorically reject the baseless assertions of wrongdoing made against them and they never received 13 million. He added that the 2013 butterfly trust mentioned in today's filing by Ms. George has nothing whatsoever to do with Mr. Epstein's estate or any funds available to it. Oh, I'm sure that Denise George just made this up. She just, you know, was sitting around having her tea and crumpets this morning and said, you know what? Ah, we're gonna make something up. 13 sounds like a good number, huh? 13 million. Fantasy land. These mother effers are living in fantasy land, folks. The US Virgin Islands sued Mr. Epstein's estate in January of 2020, seeking to recoup at least 80 million in tax benefits that local authorities contend his Southern Trust Company received through deception and fraud. Well, speak to the federal government. They got a fat chunk of that. Ask them to break you off a little peace. They like breaking off money to everybody but the citizens of the nation. I'm sure they'll break you off a little taste. Miss George has argued that the US Territory was deceived into granting lucrative tax benefits that enabled Mr. Epstein to use his private island residence there as a place to sexually abuse teenage girls and young women and just women in general. And furthermore, that sounds like a you problem. US Virgin Islands, get your shit together. Or as the homie smoke would say, my main dude smoke. Shout out to smoke. Fix your face. It's a bad look going after money that should be going to these survivors. An absolutely terrible look, especially considering it was your own Politicians who set these deals up with Epstein, you can't say, oh, well, they were duped. They're not allowed to be duped. They're in public office. Their job is to safeguard the public from exactly like this. So when it goes south, it is on them. How many of them went to prison? Oh, none of them. So you're not getting any money. At least that's how I feel about it. The Butterfly Trust had been used by Mr. Epstein to make payments to some of the people who helped him recruit and groom teenage girls for abuse, according to bank regulators in New York. And you think the name means nothing? Butterfly Trust. He's turned. You know what a butter. How a butterfly becomes a butterfly, right? Yeah, the. The whole process. Well, that's what he thinks he's doing to these disadvantaged girls, Jeffrey Epstein. Oh, I'm gonna make them into a butterfly. Sick. Disgusting. Perverted. Mr. Epstein's estate, valued at around 600 million at the time of his death, is now worth worth less than 185 million after paying 121 million in settlements to more than 135 survivors and nearly 200 million in federal taxes. So between taxes and the survivors, you're looking at 321 million. So where's the rest of the money? It sure cost them a lot of dough to keep up the hedges, huh? How much is DIRECTV in the Virgin Islands? Because from where I'm at, you can get all the channels and. And you're looking at about 300amonth. So where's all this money going if it's not being funneled anywhere? Such a joke. Such an absolute joke. I try not to get so fired up on a Saturday morning, but, man, these make it difficult. All right, everybody. Well, that's gonna do it for this episode. And I'll tell you what, it's just very frustrating to see these people continue to get away with it when there's all of this evidence. If it was me or you with even half of the charges or one of these charges, we'd have our door kicked in already. But bitch ass clowns like Ndyke and Khan get to continue to swim around in their pools, drink their mixed drinks, and live the high life. Well, I'm here to tell you folks, me, my fat mouth and my beard, we're gonna be here yapping and yelling and roaring about these scumbags until somebody does something. All right, that's going to do it for this episode, folks. If you'd like to contact me, you can do that at bobby capuchirotonmail.com that's B O B B Y C A P U c c I protonmail.com you can also find me on Twitter at B O B b y/cap ucci. The link that I discussed can be found in, in the description box. What's up everyone? And welcome back to the Epstein Chronicles. So the U. S. Virgin Islands and Denise George, well they've settled with Jeffrey Epstein's estate and Jeffrey Epstein's estate is now paying the Virgin Islands $105 million. So like I said from the jump with Denise George and the Virgin Islands, it was nothing more than a shakedown. They shouldn't have got one single dollar from all of this. Remember, it was their elected officials who let Jeffrey Epstein do what he was doing. But Denise George came out and was talking all kinds of a good game. Oh, I'm, I have a seco lawsuit. I'm looking for justice for the girls. Really. She was looking to get some money for the Virgin Islands like I said from jump street. And here we go once again, that being played out right here across the headlines. You see all of these people who claim that they care about justice, this, that, the other thing, they don't. None of them do. If they did and they were in a position to pursue these people, they would continue to pursue them. But it was all about getting some money from the estate. That's $105 million that should have went to the survivors but instead is going to some government entity. So it could probably be spread around with the politicians. What, the people of the USVI are going to see this money?
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Yeah, okay, sure.
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It's such a joke and it's laughable that people would actually think that Denise George and the USVI really cared about these survivors. $105 million. Let's remember the whole entire settlement program only paid out what, 140 million. But the, the Virgin Islands was wronged so badly that they get $105 million, huh? Yeah, real equitable. And then people wonder why, why folks are up in arms all the time. It is such a joke. The Brinks truck should have backed up to the survivors houses and it should have just dumped money on their lawn. But instead they had to go through this whole process, they had this whole program set up. And now when we look back in hindsight, now that program doesn't look so great, does it? Considering the virgin islands gets $105 million. You mean to tell me that they were wronged more than these little girls who were raped? Sorry, I don't buy it. I didn't buy it then and I don't buy it now. And I find it disgusting that another government entity is going to benefit from Jeffrey Epstein and his disgusting ill gotten gains. Today's article is from NBC News. Headline, Jeffrey Epstein's estate agrees to pay the Virgin Islands more than 105 million to settle the civil lawsuit. The lawsuit filed in January of 2020 alleged that Epstein created a network of companies and conspired with others to help him carry out and conceal the alleged sex trafficking scheme. So instead of going after that alleged sex trafficking scheme that Denise George talked about that she filed the seco suit about, she settles. Hell of a prosecutor. She really has your best interest at heart, folks. This article was authored by Rich Rich Shapiro, Sarah Fitzpatrick and Diana Dazrath. The estate of Jeffrey Epstein has agreed to pay the US Virgin Islands more than $105 million to settle a lawsuit alleging that he used the territory as a base of extensive sex trafficking operations. Yeah, you know, all of the tax breaks that the elected officials down there gave them, all of the politicians hooked them up with, they didn't go to jail. Did any of them have their bank accounts seized or anything like that? No, of course they didn't. But let's steal from the survivors a little bit more. The suit is being settled nearly three years after Denise N. George, the Attorney General of the US Territory sued, sued Epstein, a New York financier. You mean a New York pedophile who died by suicide, allegedly in 2019 as he was awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. Yo, it gets burdensome to have to continuously correct the narrative in these legacy media pieces. I mean, for real, you can't call him a pedophile. Oh yeah, he died by suicide. We can prove that.
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Yeah, okay, sure.
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The settlement restores the faith of the people of the Virgin Islands that its laws will be enforced without fear or favorite against those who break them. George said in a statement on Wednesday. We are sending a clear message that the Virgin Islands will not serve as a haven for human trafficking. Oh, give me a break. You're sending a message that you're going to get rich on the pain of other people. That's what this is. The Virgin Islands is profiting off of the back of these survivors. That's how I see it and I find it reprehensible. Daniel Weiner, a lawyer for the estate, perfect name by the way, said that the settlement does not include any admission of liability or fault and that the co executors deny any allegations of wrongdoing oh yeah, you know, because Darren Indyke didn't go to a bank 97 times in structure withdrawals or anything like that. That never happened, never mind all the rest of the stuff. But yeah, they didn't do anything. They're not going to accept any liability here. Why should they? The co executors ultimately concluded that the settlement is in the best interest of the estate, including its creditors and claimants to avoid the time, expense and inherent uncertainties of a protracted litigation. Weiner said the settlement is consistent with the co executives stated intent and practice since their appointments to those roles. To solve, to resolve claims related to any misconduct by Jeffrey Epstein in a manner sensitive to those who suffered him. I mean, come on, man, you guys are out here really trying to pitch this bullshit. And anyone who thinks this is a good idea, I'd love to hear why you think it's a good idea. So should the state of New Mexico sue for $105 million? Should the state of New York sue? How is it that the Virgin Islands all of a sudden is a victim here? Under the terms of the settlement, Epstein's estate will pay the Virgin Islands 105 million in cash as well as half of the proceeds from the sale of Little St. James, one of two private islands Epstein owned. George's office said in a statement the estate also agreed to pay $450,000 to repair environmental damage around Great St. James. The other Epstein owned island. I mean, this is just crazy. Remember, all of this money should have went to the survivors, but it didn't. We know that some of them got lowballed. We know that some of them were turned down. Meanwhile, now the US Virgin Islands, which didn't do shit to earn this money. In fact, I'd probably sue them if I was one of these girls. And now they're getting 105 million. Must be nice. The lawsuit filed in January of 2020 alleged that Epstein created a network of companies and conspired with others to help him carry out and conceal the alleged sex trafficking scheme. The so called Epstein Enterprise transported dozens of women and girls as young as 12 to his estate on Little St James where they were forced to engage in sexual acts. The suit said the alleged. The so called Epstein Enterprise. Is the author of this article really attempting to cast doubt that there was a criminal enterprise being run by Jeffrey Epstein? And if so folks, that's all you need to know about your legacy media. Epstein engaged in a pattern and practice of trafficking and abusing young women and female children on this private secluded island. Of Little St. James, where Epstein and his associates could avoid detection of their illegal activity from the Virgin Islands and federal law enforcement and prevent these young women and underage girls from leaving freely and escaping the abuse, the suit said. So if it was that brutal and it was that bad, and it was, why are you settling as a prosecutor now? Why would you settle even for one second here? I'll tell you why. Because it was all about the money from Jump street and it wasn't about justice. Epstein, who was found hanged in the Metropolitan Correctional center in Manhattan in August of 2019, was previously charged by New York prosecutors on sex trafficking and conspiracy charges. He was facing up to 45 years in prison if he were convicted. The prosecutors in that case said Epstein, who was 66 at the time of his death, sexually abused dozens of underage girls at his properties and in New York and Florida in the early 2000s. He was also accused of paying many of his victims. Survivors, you mean, to recruit others, allowing him to build a vast network of women to exploit. Yeah, that's what he did. It was a sexual Ponzi scheme. Okay. And call them what they are, survivors. Have these people not gotten the. The. The memo yet on how to properly talk about stuff like this? Epstein bought Little St. James off St. Thomas for 7.95 million in 1998, NBC News reported. He went on to build a vast, vast estate featuring a 24,000 square foot private residence, two pools, a spa, and a blue striped structure that drew intense scrutiny online. Yeah, you mean that temple that he built? Why don't you just call it what it is? It was a temple of some sort. Now, you all know me. I'm not into the occult or that Satanism stuff people are talking about all the time. I don't know anything about that. Right? I don't know anything about spirituality or God or the devil. What I do know is that there is fucking evil right here on earth. And that evil is people like Jeffrey Epstein. And the fact that this dude was able to do what he did for as long as he did it is enough to make me sick. And then you flip the script here and you have somebody like Denise George down in the Virgin Islands who was after this money the whole entire time, like I've said from Jump street finally gets the money she was after. Meanwhile, how many more survivors are out there? How many more women are out there who haven't come forward yet? So what happens when they come forward? There's gonna be nothing left in the kitty, because Denise George and the US Virgin Islands are victims here. Well, seems like that's the way it's gonna end up going. And for my money, not a good look. All right, folks, that's gonna do it for this one. If you'd like to contact me, you can do that@bobby capuchirotonmail.com that's B O B B Y C A P U C c I@protonmail.com. you can also find me on Twitter at B O B B Y. Underscore Capuci. The link that I discussed can be found in the description box.
Podcast Summary: The Epstein Chronicles — Mega Edition: The USVI And Its Contentious Battle Against The Epstein Estate (7/1/26)
Host: Bobby Capucci | Date: July 1, 2026
In this "Mega Edition" episode, Bobby Capucci dives deep into the ongoing legal battles between the US Virgin Islands (USVI) and the Jeffrey Epstein Estate. The discussion centers on the controversial roles of estate executors Darren Indyke and Richard Kahn, the recent $105 million settlement with the USVI, and the broader implications for survivors of Epstein’s crimes. Capucci delivers his signature unfiltered, passionate commentary, holding nothing back as he critiques both the estate’s practices and the authorities’ responses.
On the Executors:
“These two men have zero business being involved in any of this. It’s offensive. … 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.” (00:50)
On Transparency and Privacy:
“If the survivors didn’t want numbers getting out as far as how much money they received, I could see that… But the estate has no privacy anymore. They should be laid bare for everybody to see.” (04:54)
On Government Profiting vs. Survivor Justice:
“It is such a joke. The Brinks truck should have backed up to the survivors' houses and it should have just dumped money on their lawn. But instead… now the Virgin Islands gets $105 million. You mean to tell me that they were wronged more than these little girls who were raped? Sorry, I don't buy it.” (33:02)
On Media Coverage & Public Perception:
“Some people still don’t believe what is going on here. … The secrecy of the media… 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 they want the clicks.” (05:50–06:40, paraphrased)
On the Bigger Picture:
“If it was me or you with even half of the charges or one of these charges, we’d have our door kicked in already. But [people] like Ndyke and Khan get to continue to swim around in their pools, drink their mixed drinks, and live the high life.” (31:55)
Bobby Capucci’s tone is blunt, passionate, and often laced with sarcasm and dark humor. He pulls no punches when discussing the failures of the justice system, perceived hypocrisy of officials, and the ongoing victimization of survivors. His outrage is matched by his determination to uncover the truth and demand real accountability.
This episode of The Epstein Chronicles offers a scathing, detailed look at the unresolved, often infuriating legal aftermath of Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes—highlighting the failures of courts, government, and the media to fully reckon with the scope of Epstein’s enterprise or deliver true justice for survivors. Capucci’s relentless focus on the roles of Indyke and Kahn, the dubious actions of USVI officials, and the continuing lack of transparency make this an essential listen for anyone following the case.