
Hosted by Hal Molty · EN
A deep-dive into the Jeffrey Epstein investigation files released by the Department of Justice. We examine the 1 million+ documents made public—uncovering the connections, the cover-ups, and the powerful names involved. From flight logs and email chains to witness statements and financial records, every episode is grounded in the actual evidence. No speculation, no conspiracy theories—just the files, the facts, and the shocking truths they reveal about Epstein, Maxwell, and everyone in their orbit.

Forty nine Zorro Ranch Road, Stanley, New Mexico. An address listed in federal court records for one of Jeffrey Epstein most secretive properties. A sprawling ranch compound in the high desert, far from the Palm Beach mansion, far from the private island. The same patterns played out, with even fewer witnesses. DOJ files reveal the full scope.

Jeffrey Epstein did not operate alone. DOJ files reveal a network of women who managed his daily operations, scheduled his victims, and kept the machine running. Sarah Kellen, Lesley Groff, and Nadia Marcinkova appear across thousands of court filings, FBI interviews, and grand jury testimony. Their names were written into the Non Prosecution Agreement that protected them all.

Former President Bill Clinton once praised Jeffrey Epstein's insights and generosity. But what insights was Epstein really providing, and what did that generosity buy? This episode traces the paper trail from flight logs and FBI interviews to FedEx records and witness statements, revealing the depth of Clinton's connection to a convicted sex trafficker. Based entirely on Department of Justice documents.

July 6, 2019. Jeffrey Epstein is arrested at Teterboro Airport. Thirty four days later, he is dead. We reconstruct those thirty four days from the DOJ documents: the arrest, the indictment, the first incident in his cell, the removal from suicide watch, the signing of his last will, and the morning of August 10. The documents tell us what happened. They do not tell us why.

Behind every predator is a financial infrastructure. We follow the money through Leslie Wexner, the billionaire who trusted Epstein for 15 years, and JPMorgan Chase, which kept him as a client after his first conviction.

We return to the Trump connection with new documents that raise different questions. About investigations that asked about Trump specifically. About a prosecutor who protected Epstein and later joined the Trump cabinet. And about a network of associates whose paths crossed with both men.Based on 1 million+ documents released by the Department of Justice.

In the summer of 2019, as Jeffrey Epstein sat in a Manhattan jail cell awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges, reporters gathered outside the White House to ask President Donald Trump about his relationship with the disgraced financier.This episode examines the documented relationship between Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein, from the Palm Beach social scene of the 1990s to the very public distancing that followed Epstein's arrest. Using flight logs, FBI reports, and magazine interviews, we separate documented facts from speculation.This is what the files reveal.

The unnamed individuals who were granted immunity or protected by the Non-Prosecution Agreement. Lesley Groff, Sarah Kellen, Nadia Marcinkova, and Jean-Luc Brunel appeared in subpoena documents, victim testimony, and flight logs, but were never charged with federal crimes in the 2007 case.

Seventy acres in the Caribbean Sea. A private island accessible only by boat or helicopter. Staff paid through shell companies. Victims transported across international waters. Hidden cameras documenting everything. This is the story of Little St. James, Jeffrey Epstein's island fortress of secrets.This episode examines Epstein's 1998 purchase of the island, the shell company LSJ EMPLOYEES LLC that ran operations, the transportation network that moved victims across borders, and the hidden cameras that documented everything. From bank records showing $200,000+ in monthly transfers to victim testimony about photographs in every residence, the files reveal how Epstein built his island fortress of secrets.

A photograph. A British prince with his arm around a young woman. She was seventeen years old. The image would become one of the most controversial royal photographs in modern history. And the woman in that photograph would become the royal family's most persistent accuser.In our last episode, we explored Prince Andrew's refusal to cooperate with investigators. Today, we hear from the woman at the center of the storm. Virginia Giuffre. Her testimony. Her evidence. Her journey from Epstein victim to royal accuser.This episode examines Virginia Giuffre's allegations against Prince Andrew, the famous photograph that places them together, and the three locations where she says she was trafficked to the Duke of York.