• MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 8) (3/3/26)
    Mar 5 2026
    Michael Thomas was a veteran correctional officer employed by the Federal Bureau of Prisons at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan — a federal detention facility — where Jeffrey Epstein was being held in the Special Housing Unit (SHU) while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges. Thomas had been with the Bureau of Prisons since about 2007 and, on the night of Epstein’s death (August 9–10, 2019), was assigned to an overnight shift alongside another officer, Tova Noel, responsible for conducting required 30-minute inmate checks and institutional counts in the SHU. Because Epstein’s cellmate had been moved and not replaced, Epstein was alone in his cell, making regular monitoring all the more crucial under bureau policy.

    Thomas became a focal figure in the official investigations into Epstein’s death because surveillance footage and institutional records showed that neither he nor Noel conducted the required rounds or counts through the night before Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell early on August 10. Prosecutors subsequently charged both officers with conspiracy and falsifying records for signing count slips that falsely indicated they had completed rounds they had not performed. Thomas and Noel later entered deferred prosecution agreements in which they admitted falsifying records and avoided prison time, instead receiving supervisory release and community service. Investigators concluded that chronic staffing shortages and procedural failures at the jail contributed to the circumstances that allowed Epstein to remain unmonitored for hours before his death, which was officially ruled a suicide by hanging.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00113577.pdf
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    12 mins
  • MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 7) (3/3/26)
    Mar 5 2026
    Michael Thomas was a veteran correctional officer employed by the Federal Bureau of Prisons at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan — a federal detention facility — where Jeffrey Epstein was being held in the Special Housing Unit (SHU) while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges. Thomas had been with the Bureau of Prisons since about 2007 and, on the night of Epstein’s death (August 9–10, 2019), was assigned to an overnight shift alongside another officer, Tova Noel, responsible for conducting required 30-minute inmate checks and institutional counts in the SHU. Because Epstein’s cellmate had been moved and not replaced, Epstein was alone in his cell, making regular monitoring all the more crucial under bureau policy.

    Thomas became a focal figure in the official investigations into Epstein’s death because surveillance footage and institutional records showed that neither he nor Noel conducted the required rounds or counts through the night before Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell early on August 10. Prosecutors subsequently charged both officers with conspiracy and falsifying records for signing count slips that falsely indicated they had completed rounds they had not performed. Thomas and Noel later entered deferred prosecution agreements in which they admitted falsifying records and avoided prison time, instead receiving supervisory release and community service. Investigators concluded that chronic staffing shortages and procedural failures at the jail contributed to the circumstances that allowed Epstein to remain unmonitored for hours before his death, which was officially ruled a suicide by hanging.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00113577.pdf
    Show More Show Less
    16 mins
  • MCC Corrections Officer Michael Thomas And His OIG Interview Related To Epstein's Death (Part 6) (3/3/26)
    Mar 4 2026
    Michael Thomas was a veteran correctional officer employed by the Federal Bureau of Prisons at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan — a federal detention facility — where Jeffrey Epstein was being held in the Special Housing Unit (SHU) while awaiting trial on federal sex-trafficking charges. Thomas had been with the Bureau of Prisons since about 2007 and, on the night of Epstein’s death (August 9–10, 2019), was assigned to an overnight shift alongside another officer, Tova Noel, responsible for conducting required 30-minute inmate checks and institutional counts in the SHU. Because Epstein’s cellmate had been moved and not replaced, Epstein was alone in his cell, making regular monitoring all the more crucial under bureau policy.

    Thomas became a focal figure in the official investigations into Epstein’s death because surveillance footage and institutional records showed that neither he nor Noel conducted the required rounds or counts through the night before Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell early on August 10. Prosecutors subsequently charged both officers with conspiracy and falsifying records for signing count slips that falsely indicated they had completed rounds they had not performed. Thomas and Noel later entered deferred prosecution agreements in which they admitted falsifying records and avoided prison time, instead receiving supervisory release and community service. Investigators concluded that chronic staffing shortages and procedural failures at the jail contributed to the circumstances that allowed Epstein to remain unmonitored for hours before his death, which was officially ruled a suicide by hanging.









    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00113577.pdf
    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • War With Iran Reshapes the News Cycle While Epstein Questions Remain Unanswered (3/4/26)
    Mar 4 2026
    War has a way of swallowing the national conversation, and that reality helps explain why interest in the Epstein story has dipped as conflict with Iran dominates the headlines. Major wars immediately shift media coverage, political priorities, and public attention toward the crisis at hand, pushing other issues out of the spotlight. That shift does not necessarily mean the Epstein story has lost importance, but it does illustrate how powerful global events can redirect the national focus almost overnight. The timing of the war has nevertheless raised questions among observers who were closely following the growing pressure for transparency around the Epstein files. While the idea that a war would be deliberately started to bury a scandal sounds far-fetched on its face, the Epstein case has already exposed enough institutional failures and secrecy that many people are reluctant to dismiss the possibility outright. History shows that governments sometimes benefit politically when foreign conflicts unify the public and redirect scrutiny away from domestic controversies.

    At the same time, wars typically arise from complex geopolitical factors rather than a single domestic motive, and proving that a conflict was initiated as a distraction would require clear evidence that does not currently exist. What can be said with confidence is that crises like war naturally alter the political and media landscape, often slowing investigations and shifting public priorities. The Epstein case itself remains significant because it represents unresolved questions about powerful individuals and institutional accountability, and those issues will not disappear simply because global events have changed the news cycle. Even if attention temporarily shifts elsewhere, the demand for transparency surrounding the Epstein files is likely to persist. Ultimately, the key question is not whether war has overshadowed the story in the short term, but whether institutions continue pursuing accountability despite the distraction of global conflict.


    to contact me:
    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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    21 mins
  • Theater on the Hill: The Terrible Optics of the Epstein Investigation Led By Congress (3/4/26)
    Mar 4 2026
    The congressional committee overseeing aspects of the Jeffrey Epstein investigation has too often projected disorganization rather than discipline. Hearings have at times devolved into partisan sparring, with members appearing more focused on cable-news soundbites than methodical fact-finding. Lawmakers have publicly contradicted one another about timelines, subpoena strategies, and the scope of requested records, creating confusion about what the committee is actually pursuing. Promised document dumps have been delayed or incomplete, fueling public skepticism about competence and seriousness. Grandstanding exchanges with witnesses have sometimes overshadowed substantive lines of inquiry, leaving key evidentiary gaps unexplored in open session. When members use hearings to relitigate broader political grievances instead of drilling down into financial trails, prosecutorial decisions, or institutional failures, it weakens the perception of rigor. The result, to many observers, is an oversight effort that appears reactive and fragmented rather than strategic and coordinated.

    That perception is amplified when internal leaks, public infighting, and inconsistent messaging dominate headlines more than concrete findings. Announcements of “bombshell” revelations have occasionally yielded little new information, undermining credibility. Meanwhile, disputes over jurisdiction, document redactions, and executive-branch compliance have played out in public without a clear, unified enforcement plan. For a case that implicates powerful institutions and demands precision, the optics of confusion and theatrics can make the process look unserious. Oversight works best when it is disciplined, bipartisan where possible, and relentlessly evidence-driven. When it instead resembles political theater it risks eroding public trust in Congress’s ability to deliver accountability in one of the most scrutinized scandals in recent memory.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    Serious investigation or ‘clown show’? Clintons’ closed testimonies on Epstein leave room for disagreement - POLITICO
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    18 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And The Girls With No Names (Part 3) (3/4/26)
    Mar 4 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s empire was not only built on money and connections but on silence. Alongside Jean-Luc Brunel, he deliberately targeted vulnerable girls from Eastern Europe and South America, knowing cultural shame, disbelief, and poverty would keep them voiceless. Promised modeling careers, housekeeping jobs, or education, these young women instead found themselves trapped, their passports taken, their dignity stolen, and their futures erased. Epstein weaponized entire societies against them, understanding that in many cultures, speaking out meant exile, ridicule, or dishonor. Their silence was not incidental—it was the very architecture of his abuse.

    Even in death, Epstein’s greatest weapon endures. While some survivors bravely stepped forward, countless nameless victims remain erased from the story, still carrying the silence he engineered. Their absence is not a void—it is evidence of crimes too vast to ever be fully told. Justice has been partial, selective, sanitized, and until the world acknowledges the invisible victims, Epstein’s legacy of silence still shields him. The loudest scream in this story is the one we cannot hear, and if we forget it, then Epstein wins again.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And The Girls With No Names (Part 2) (3/4/26)
    Mar 4 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s empire was not only built on money and connections but on silence. Alongside Jean-Luc Brunel, he deliberately targeted vulnerable girls from Eastern Europe and South America, knowing cultural shame, disbelief, and poverty would keep them voiceless. Promised modeling careers, housekeeping jobs, or education, these young women instead found themselves trapped, their passports taken, their dignity stolen, and their futures erased. Epstein weaponized entire societies against them, understanding that in many cultures, speaking out meant exile, ridicule, or dishonor. Their silence was not incidental—it was the very architecture of his abuse.

    Even in death, Epstein’s greatest weapon endures. While some survivors bravely stepped forward, countless nameless victims remain erased from the story, still carrying the silence he engineered. Their absence is not a void—it is evidence of crimes too vast to ever be fully told. Justice has been partial, selective, sanitized, and until the world acknowledges the invisible victims, Epstein’s legacy of silence still shields him. The loudest scream in this story is the one we cannot hear, and if we forget it, then Epstein wins again.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show More Show Less
    12 mins
  • Jeffrey Epstein And The Girls With No Names (Part 1) (3/4/26)
    Mar 4 2026
    Jeffrey Epstein’s empire was not only built on money and connections but on silence. Alongside Jean-Luc Brunel, he deliberately targeted vulnerable girls from Eastern Europe and South America, knowing cultural shame, disbelief, and poverty would keep them voiceless. Promised modeling careers, housekeeping jobs, or education, these young women instead found themselves trapped, their passports taken, their dignity stolen, and their futures erased. Epstein weaponized entire societies against them, understanding that in many cultures, speaking out meant exile, ridicule, or dishonor. Their silence was not incidental—it was the very architecture of his abuse.

    Even in death, Epstein’s greatest weapon endures. While some survivors bravely stepped forward, countless nameless victims remain erased from the story, still carrying the silence he engineered. Their absence is not a void—it is evidence of crimes too vast to ever be fully told. Justice has been partial, selective, sanitized, and until the world acknowledges the invisible victims, Epstein’s legacy of silence still shields him. The loudest scream in this story is the one we cannot hear, and if we forget it, then Epstein wins again.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show More Show Less
    12 mins