
Newly released U.S. Justice Department records expose how a circle of well-credentialed, “elite” physicians provided bespoke medical care to Jeffrey Epstein — and to some of the young women he referred to as his “girls” — in ways that crossed clear...
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What's up, everyone? And welcome to another episode of the Epstein Chronicles. According to the official narrative that was given to us by the doj, Jeffrey Epstein was working alone. And there's no way that there was a group of people that were helping Jeffrey Epstein out. It was just him and Ghislaine Maxwell. But the evidence that we have seen over the years and over the last few months in the wake of the file dump, there was a lot more going on here than just Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. And that doesn't mean everybody was involved in the actual abuse. But even if you didn't take part in the actual abuse, but you were involved in the logistics, you're just as complicit, and you should be held accountable for your actions. But that was never going to happen here. And again, it's all by design. The whole entire thing was built to collapse from the very beginning. Do you really think these people wanted a RICO case? You really think they wanted to dig deep and get to the bottom of this? No way in hell. And in this episode, you're going to hear about elite doctors led by Eva Anderson Dubin, who helped women out that were in Jeffrey Epstein's orbit. And we all know what that means. So today we have an article from Money Control, and the headline, elite Doctors Treated Jeffrey Epstein and the Women Around Him. The new files show how far some went. This article was authored by MC World Desk. The latest tranche of documents released by the US Justice Department lays out something more granular than scandal. It shows how a small circle of, well, credentialed doctors provided bespoke medical services to Jeffrey Epstein while also treating young women he referred to as his girls. The records, spanning roughly a decade before his 2019 death in federal custody, include emails, lab reports, financial transfers, and appointment logs that illustrate how medicine, money, and power overlapped in ways that raise serious ethical questions. And just keep in mind, folks, the FBI had all this information. They knew about all of this. They knew just how deep this web went. And they knew how expansive Epstein's criminal network was, and they chose not to do anything about it. They chose not to charge anybody else. They chose to lie to us. The issue is not simply that wealthy people receive concierge care. It's that some physicians appear to have structured that care around Epstein's preferences rather than the autonomy and privacy of the women involved. The New York Times reported, While the women, I hate to say it, they were just a commodity. They were brought over here from other countries. They were engulfed in all kinds of immigration scandals where they were promised jobs and the rest of it only to be pimped out to Jeffrey Epstein and his buddies. And it's wild to me that there's people out there that dispute that this happened. I mean, it's crazy. Now, look, there's also people out there that get this completely wrong. Jeffrey Epstein wasn't running a brothel like Heidi Fleiss. Instead, it was a way to ingratiate himself with these people. And then once he had his hooks in them, he owned them. But the girls were just a commodity to Jeffrey Epstein and his friends. They weren't even real. They might as well have been inanimate objects. That's how little they care about these people. One episode centers on a Mount Sinai plastic surgeon who stitched a young woman's head wound with 35 sutures on Epstein's dining room table after she was injured on his private island. Emails show that Eva Dubin, a longtime associate of Epstein and founder of the Dubin Breast center at Mount Sinai Health System, helped coordinate the response. And remember, Eva Dubin testified at the Glenn Maxwell trial. Nobody asked her any questions about this. And in my opinion, Eva Dubin and her husband Glenn, they should have been part of a RICO investigation, and they should have been charged with financial crimes as well. As Dubin investigated over the claims that he assaulted Virginia Roberts. And just to be clear, once again, the DOJ had all that information, and they chose not to pursue it, as girls in Epstein's orbit are getting surgery on dining room tables. But sure, the whole thing is incorrupt. Everything's fine here, and we're just overblowing the situation and we shouldn't panic. Everything's okay. The adults are in charge. Imagine being that naive, actually thinking that the people in charge give or gave a single. Medical ethicists say that a deep facial laceration would ordinarily be treated in a fully equipped emergency department. Performing the procedure in a private residence may have reduced visibility and. And inconvenience, but it also bypassed standard hospital safeguards designed to protect patients if complications arise. Oh, what do they care? They would have just thrown her in the ocean, right? Toss her right in the ocean, let the sharks do their work and be done with it. And yo, I'm only half kidding when I say that Mount Sinai has since said it formed a committee to examine historical ties to Epstein. Oh, well, that's going to help us out now. Nothing like going back and taking a look at what happened instead of dealing with it when it was happening. And it's so hilarious to me when these people are like, we have no idea what was going on. Oh, we have no idea that Jeffrey Epstein was such a scumbag. Well, you should know that you shouldn't be doing surgery on someone's dining room table, right? I'm pretty sure they taught you that in medical school. The documents also suggest that Epstein was kept informed about the medical details of women he sent to the doctors. In one exchange, a woman complained that doctors he paid directly were reporting back to him about her treatments. Under U.S. federal privacy law, physicians generally cannot disclose patient health information to third parties without consent. Yeah, HIPAA laws, but what does it matter? Epstein and his crew were breaking every law they came across. Nobody stopped them, nobody cared, and nobody still cares. We should just move on, right? There's nothing to investigate. There were no crimes committed in Florida. Epstein's longtime internist, Bruce Moskovitz, discussed abnormal blood work and acne medication eligibility for a young woman. In emails with Epstein. In another instance, after gonorrhea treatment was arranged for two women, texts indicate concern about avoiding mandatory public health reporting. That could link infections back to Epstein. Yeah, there's no human trafficking. And these girls just caught gonorrhea on their own. Right? They just happened to catch it while they were down at the local pub. Now, of course, it's possible that that could happen, but what do you think's more likely? These women contracted something while being trafficked by this scumbag? Or they just caught it on their own? Now, under normal circumstances, I wouldn't have an opinion on that. How would I know? But using hindsight as a guide and what we know about Epstein seems pretty likely to me. Such communication raised the question of who the primary patient was in practice. The woman receiving treatment or the man paying for it? The woman receiving treatment, of course. Just because you pay doesn't mean you have access to someone's HIPA file. What kind of nonsense is that? The files show a Columbia University dentist, Thomas Magnani, asking how much dental work Epstein wanted performed on a woman with severe decay. Records also indicate donations to Columbia's dental school following those interactions. And that's how we got Karina Schuliak into the school. Remember, everything's transactional when we're talking about Jeffrey Epstein. In Manhattan, dermatologist Stephen Victor treated women referred by Epstein while simultaneously seeking loans and investments from him. Emails reflect tension over unpaid services and business expectations, blending clinical care with financial leverage. Well, that sounds familiar, huh? Has Epstein ever had a relationship that didn't sour over finances or women Another physician, Bernard Krueger, co founded a members only emergency service that enrolled Epstein and several unnamed women for annual access, at one point listing them without names and billing correspondence. Well, why would you list names? No paper trail. We have to make sure our traffic girls remain girls with no name. Yeah, that's the whole point. That's why they started getting girls from outside the country. Epstein, Wise, Dub. Look, Epstein's a lot of things, but he's certainly not an idiot when it comes to this. He knew his business, he knew what he was doing, and he knew how to avoid detection. These arrangements illustrate how concierge medicine, built on discretion and direct payment, can create structural vulnerabilities when one powerful patron stands between doctors and young patients. Dr. Dubin's role extended beyond referrals. Emails show her facilitating appointments for Epstein's associates, and in at least one case, helping secure a volunteer position at the hospital for a young woman that he recommended. Epstein also donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to Mount Sinai programs. Or over time. Dr. Dubin has said publicly that her referrals were made in good faith and without knowledge of wrongdoing. Does anyone really believe that? Have we forgotten what Virginia told us? Have we forgotten what Ronaldo Rizzo told us about the 15 year old Swedish girl? I mean, holy. Still, the pattern in the document suggests that Epstein was able to leverage philanthropy, personal relationships, and institutional prestige to build loyal medical networks. Donations flowed alongside access. Introductions to wealthy contacts accompanied clinical favors. This is how it works. And when you're a guy like Epstein or any criminal organization, it's crucial to have medical professionals on standby. Somebody gets shot, you got to bring them somewhere that's not going to file a police report. And the same goes here. 35 stitches in the head. Now, of course, it could have been an accident. I don't rule that out. But it could have been something nefarious as well. Legal scholars note that consent becomes complicated when there is a severe imbalance of power. If a young woman's housing, immigration status, money, or social stability depended on Epstein, her agreement to share medical details with them may not have been meaningfully voluntary. They weren't voluntary. They weren't sharing this stuff because they wanted to. They had to. The files do not conclusively establish that every disclosure was unlawful. But they document repeated scenarios in which Epstein was treated as a decision maker in the care of adult women whose medical privacy should have been paramount. Epstein's criminal conduct was already known by. By the time many of these interactions occurred. What the documents reveal is not just a predator's manipulation. But how professional boundaries can erode in the presence of wealth, access and influence. For hospitals and licensing boards, the question now is not historical curiosity. It's whether existing safeguards are strong enough when the patient paying the bills is not the only person being treated. Well, I don't think it's any question. I don't care who's paying the bill. It's nobody's business what's going on with you medically. And especially if someone's a convicted sex offender and they're sending you girls and asking for discretion, probably a good idea not to play ball. So now that we know this and have receipts to back it up, is there going to be any investigation? Is anybody going to be held accountable? Is anyone going to lose their medical license? Well, if history is any guide, the answer is no. But hopefully that tide is turning and hopefully now that people are paying attention and people are awake, there's going to be some accountability for the people who played such a big part in keeping Jeffrey Epstein's machine running over the decades. And in my opinion, Eva Anderson Dubin is certainly one of them. All the information that goes with this episode can be found in the description box.
Episode: The Epstein Doctor Network: How Medical Professionals Became Enablers
Host: Bobby Capucci
Date: June 26, 2026
This episode delves into how a network of elite medical professionals—led in part by Eva Anderson Dubin—became enablers in Jeffrey Epstein’s operations. With recent DOJ file dumps providing new details, Capucci breaks down how physicians not only provided concierge care for Epstein and his inner circle but also circumnavigated ethics, legality, and patient privacy for money, power, and influence. Using a critical tone and personal commentary, Capucci highlights just how enmeshed respected individuals and institutions became in appeasing Epstein and obscuring his crimes.
"According to the official narrative ... Jeffrey Epstein was working alone. And there's no way that there was a group of people that were helping ... but the evidence that we have seen ... there was a lot more going on here than just Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell." (00:15)
(03:00 — 06:40)
"The FBI had all this information ... They chose not to do anything about it. They chose to lie to us." (03:45)
"The girls were just a commodity to Jeffrey Epstein and his friends. They weren't even real. They might as well have been inanimate objects. That's how little they care about these people." (07:15)
(08:10 — 11:00)
"They would have just thrown her in the ocean, right? Tossed her right in the ocean, let the sharks do their work and be done with it. And yo, I'm only half kidding when I say that." (10:40)
(11:00 — 13:40)
"In one exchange, a woman complained that doctors he paid directly were reporting back to him about her treatments." (11:20)
"What does it matter? Epstein and his crew were breaking every law they came across. Nobody stopped them, nobody cared, and nobody still cares." (12:00)
(13:40 — 18:00)
"Well, why would you list names? No paper trail. We have to make sure our trafficked girls remain girls with no name. ... Everything's transactional when we're talking about Jeffrey Epstein." (16:40)
"Dr. Dubin has said publicly that her referrals were made in good faith and without knowledge of wrongdoing. Does anyone really believe that?" (19:35)
"When you're a guy like Epstein or any criminal organization, it's crucial to have medical professionals on standby. ... You got to bring them somewhere that's not going to file a police report." (22:20)
(23:40 — 26:00)
"They weren't sharing this stuff because they wanted to. They had to." (24:40)
"So now that we know this and have receipts to back it up, is there going to be any investigation? Is anybody going to be held accountable? ... If history is any guide, the answer is no." (27:10)
On official inaction:
"The FBI had all this information ... and they chose not to do anything about it. They chose to lie to us." (03:45)
On the reality of Epstein’s victims:
"They weren't even real. They might as well have been inanimate objects. That's how little they care about these people." (07:15)
On the Mount Sinai surgeon incident:
"Performing the procedure in a private residence may have reduced visibility and inconvenience, but it also bypassed standard hospital safeguards designed to protect patients if complications arise." (Paraphrased from article cited, commented on heavily by Capucci 09:40–10:40)
On medical privacy violations:
"Epstein was kept informed about the medical details of women he sent to the doctors ... Under U.S. federal privacy law, physicians generally cannot disclose patient health information to third parties without consent." (11:15)
On philanthropy and complicity:
"Epstein was able to leverage philanthropy, personal relationships, and institutional prestige to build loyal medical networks. ... Donations flowed alongside access. Introductions to wealthy contacts accompanied clinical favors." (19:10)
On institutional accountability:
"So now that we know this and have receipts to back it up, is there going to be any investigation? ... If history is any guide, the answer is no. But hopefully that tide is turning." (27:10)
This episode of The Epstein Chronicles confronts the disturbing reality that Jeffrey Epstein’s power network included elite doctors and prestigious medical institutions. With a critical, urgent tone, Host Bobby Capucci exposes how medicine, money, and manipulation intersected to cloak exploitation and maintain Epstein’s machine. He calls out not only Epstein’s direct enablers but also broader systemic failures among institutions and regulatory bodies—ending on a pointed demand for overdue accountability, with Eva Anderson Dubin standing as a focal example.
For further details and supporting documents, visit the episode description.