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The speaker recounts the depth of the evil involved in Jeffrey Epstein’s network as described by survivors during a press conference. They explain that 14-year-old girls were told by a high school friend to come to an old man’s house, give him a massage, and he would pay $200, with a swimming pool and other enticements presented. The massage would escalate to sexual acts, and Epstein would keep their phone numbers. Through the shame and coercion, the girls were compelled to show up at his beck and call whenever he wanted. The only way they could get out of performing sexual favors was to find another girl at their high school who would take their place. One survivor broke down in tears as she admitted that she faced a choice between finding a replacement girl or returning to perform the acts, and she chose to find another girl. The speaker notes that even after it was known that these were 15-year-old girls coerced by an adult man, people still said they were sex traffickers and trafficked these women. The speaker emphasizes the realization of how evil it is for someone to make others commit evil acts and then implicate them, which made it harder for the survivors to come forward. There is discussion of why the names of the victims aren’t released. Epstein’s abuse involved billionaires who could pay off authorities and judges. After girls reached the age of consent, Epstein would traffic them to his friends, arguing that some were prostitutes who were 18 or older and thus consenting. The speaker explains that when these men had money, they could pay off police departments, cause reports to disappear, or influence judges. Many of the girls came from less affluent families, and the money paid to the families ranged from $150,000 up to $500,000, while the girl often would not testify. The men would then use defamation lawsuits to bankrupt the survivors who spoke out or tried to contest their false allegations. The process itself functions as punishment, with survivors forced to go broke just to defend their names.

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Speaker 0: I know a little about human trafficking. The human trafficking portfolio fell underneath me in the counterterrorism shop where I was ahead. I worked with Tim Ballard at the White House to stamp out human and child sex trafficking. He was doing incredible work back then. Speaker 1: I'm the bad guy in the story. Last week, I got a call from some of the accusers, and what they're accusing him of is really not just—they're just really bad stuff. Really, really bad things. At first, because I've been friends with Tim for so long, I thought, that's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. Blew by them. Ridiculous. Until they persisted, and I started hearing more. I just heard somebody had filed in the HR complaints or something. Like, that's not possible. Well, the more the complaints come out, the worse it gets. These women called last week, and they wanted to do a show with me. That's not something I've even offered Tim. And I don't want to be the one making the calls on this. I'm not a journalist, and I'm also involved. Tim has been a friend of mine. OUR is a great organization, but I also stand up for victims. And I don't feel remaining silent on this or neutral if I know is acceptable. I don't know what they've done, but I've passed the women's number onto Leon Wolf, our news director, and said, put a journalist on this if you want. And I told him at the time, take it where it leads. I just want the truth. I just want the truth. So he put our best investigative reporter on it, and I heard last night that they are close to finishing the story. I was hoping that it was gonna be released today because this is yeah. If if if if it's true, I can't believe how many of us were duped. Speaker 2: Got pearlized. But it's still some guy who got fried and cried by the side. We gonna steal, slide, slide, slide until they all die. These niggas ain't seeing me because these niggas be small fry. I got big dude status, k l

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In response to a question, the speaker acknowledges that the problem of harassment and abuse exists in various areas with power dynamics, such as sports, politics, race, and economics. They highlight Hollywood as a particularly problematic industry due to the power dynamics involved in pursuing dreams. The speaker shares their personal experience of being victimized and emphasizes that many other men in Hollywood have faced similar situations. They explain that coming forward can lead to being blacklisted and losing career opportunities. The speaker stresses the importance of continuing the conversation and mentions the lack of awareness about survivors' rights. They express their support for the sexual assault survivors bill of rights and the need for survivors to know their rights. The transcript ends with another person asking about the speaker's experience at an event.

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Epstein surrounded himself, I'm sorry, with the powerful leaders of our country and the world. He abused not only me, but countless others, and everyone seemed to look away. He bragged about his powerful friends, including our current president, Donald Trump. I live every day with PTSD, distrusting a world that has betrayed me. There are files, government files that hold the truth about Epstein, who he knew, who owed him, who protected him, and why he was allowed to operate for so long without consequence. Why was Maxwell the only one held accountable when so many others played a role? Why does the government hide this information from the public? This secrecy is not protection. It’s complicity. That is why this bill matters. Passing it will bring accountability, transparency, and prevention, and protect the next generation of predators. This is not just my story; it is about every survivor.

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I know every video that I make about this topic is going to get suppressed, but I literally do not care because I think it's that important. There is something seriously wrong here that needs to be looked at. It is being completely overlooked that there is a man who is part of our current administration who is in a long-term relationship and has a child with a model who he has been representing since she was a teenager and also appeared on Jeffrey's flight logs when she was just 17 years old. Here are the cliff notes I’m sharing to explain why this is very alarming. Paulo Zampoli works in our current administration, is on the board of the Kennedy Center, and has been a close friend and advisor and business partner to our sitting president since the 90s. He was the modeling agent who brought Melania to The United States to meet Donald Trump originally, and they would go on to be married. Right around the same time in the late nineties, both Paulo and Donald Trump would open their own modeling agencies, and both agencies would face claims and accusations of r word s a theft of wages, overcrowded apartments where the models would be housed, exploitation, and visa fraud. Paolo is a United Nations diplomat. From 2013 to 2014, he collaborated with Ghislain and Jeffrey’s fake oceanic nonprofit environmental organization Teramar, which allowed Jeffrey and Ghislain to make further connections and gain credibility through working with the United Nations. Through his modeling agency ID Models, he would go on to represent a Brazilian teenager named Amanda Angaro, the teenager who would appear on Jeffrey’s Flight Logs back in 2002 when she was just 17 years old. A few years after Amanda appeared on Jeffrey’s Flight Logs, Paulo would go on to date her and they would have a child together, and she would go on to also become a United Nations ambassador. They have been together romantically for nearly twenty years minus a brief moment in 2018 when they did break up. Amanda tried to leave Paulo in 2018 during Trump’s first term, but Paulo called in some favors and had her flagged through immigration so that she could not return to her home country with her son. Paulo also refused to pay her any kind of child support if she were to leave him. After this, they rekindled their relationship despite repeated allegations of infidelity and SA that Paulo has engaged in while in their relationship. Most recently, in June 2025, just a couple months back, around the time when the files became a topic of conversation again, Amanda was arrested in Miami alongside a Brazilian doctor. They were arrested for illegally operating a medical facility, grand theft, organized scheme to defraud, and illegally acquiring prescription medications to give their patients; they were allegedly offering invasive cosmetic procedures without any kind of licensing. When she was arrested, Amanda was placed on an immigration hold and set to be deported. That is the last thing we have heard about Amanda Ungaro, the longtime partner of someone who is sitting in this current administration, a longtime friend of the president who appeared on Jeffrey’s flight logs back in 2002, who is just being deported. And the day after Amanda was taken into custody, Paulo Zampoli posted this photo of himself and Pam Bondi on his social media, with no mention of Amanda at all. Amanda is no longer appearing in any of his photos afterwards. There’s been no photos with her since she was arrested, no visible concern for Amanda at all. I’m not saying Amanda didn’t do anything wrong; she is in the United States, and innocent till proven guilty. Obviously she is on the fast track to being deported, and that doesn’t make any sense from the standpoint that she is still a United Nations diplomat and should have a diplomatic passport and diplomatic immunity from arrest and prosecution in many cases. In many situations, local authorities don’t have the authority to disregard diplomatic privileges. It doesn’t make any sense how the United States is actively deporting a United Nations diplomat, and it’s not being talked about in mainstream media—regardless of the fact that she was on Geoffrey’s plane at 17 years old, went on to have a child with the agent who is supposed to be representing her, who is 15 years her senior. Putting that aside because that’s extremely relevant, the fact that they’re trying to deport a United Nations diplomat makes no sense at all. I really hope everyone sees the correlation between Donald Trump’s modeling agency, Paulo Zampoli’s modeling agency, John Casablancas’s modeling agency, Jean-Luc Brunel’s modeling agency, and how all of these men were friends of Geoffrey and each one happily gave Geoffrey access to the droves of young girls and women they had in their virtual ownership. We know for a fact that all of these men had very similar business models when it came to running modeling agencies: selling dreams to vulnerable young girls and young women, then illegally bringing them from overseas to the United States where these young girls and young women would work for them, live in housing they provided (typically overcrowded and run-down), and they would take up to 80% of these girls’ wages, leaving them at the mercy of the bosses. This wasn’t just international; it happened domestically as well. When it did happen internationally, and often domestically as well, these women and young girls would be required to attend events and parties to entertain the friends and associates of their bosses. Given the accusations against these men’s modeling agencies, it’s very plausible that a victim could be silenced, even if it means deportation when they hold the title of United Nations diplomat. I’m not saying Amanda isn’t guilty of those charges. I have no idea. There is absolutely something more to this situation. Go to the next video because I found a story that aired on the news nearly twenty years ago about Paulo Zempoli and his close friend Donald Trump, and you’re going to want to see it.

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Epstein operated openly, and while many were aware of his actions, there was no legal action taken against him. Fear of him prevented anyone from pursuing justice.

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The fight with Lewis Bacon weakened Nygard's power and encouraged others to speak out about their experiences. Victims were brought forward to share their stories, revealing that Nygard surrounded himself with young women who were kept under his control through threats, intimidation, and money. Many of these women came from difficult backgrounds and were brought into his circle at a young age. Despite their fear, they bravely spoke to the FBI, police, and journalists, even though they knew that influential figures, including politicians and police officers, supported Nygard. Despite the risks, they continued to come forward, creating a snowball effect of momentum against Nygard.

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Former fashion mogul Peter Nygard's sexual assault trial began in a Toronto courtroom. Crown Lawyers accused Nygard of using his status to lure young women to a private bedroom at his headquarters. The bedroom had a giant bed, jacuzzi, and keypad-operated locks controlled by Nygard. The women, aged 16 to 28, were offered jobs or Rolling Stones tickets but ended up in the private bedroom. One 16-year-old victim was allegedly assaulted after being disoriented by a drink. Nygard, now 82, pleaded not guilty to five counts of sexual assault and one count of unlawful confinement. Witnesses testified about the bedroom's architectural details, and the Crown expects the victims to testify as well.

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Investigators say they found no incriminating client list of Epstein's, no credible evidence that Epstein blackmailed prominent individuals, and no evidence that could predicate an investigation against uncharged third parties. Epstein used edge.org to slip into the world's smartest circles. Not politics or Hollywood this time, but the thinkers who shape reality. This guy, John Brockman, a literary agent who ran it, hosted secret billionaires dinners with people like Bezos, Musk, and Google's founders all in the same room. Epstein bankrolled the operation with over half a million dollars, acting like he was funding science for the good of humanity. In reality, those dinners were access points where Brockman would personally introduce Epstein to Nobel Prize winners, brain researchers, and AI pioneers. He pitch Epstein as this genius investor in future minds. When behind the scenes, Epstein was collecting names, influence, and secrets. Emails later showed Brockman bragging about Epstein's connections, even sending photos of Epstein with world leaders right after his first conviction. Edge wasn't just a science salon. It was a social front that let Epstein rub shoulders with the people designing humanity's future. When it all came out, the question wasn't just how Epstein got away with it, but who helped open the doors? Epstein surrounded himself with women who helped him operate his network. Two of the most visible were Ghislain Maxwell and Nadia Marchenko. Maxwell played the polished recruiter, one who groomed, scheduled, and normalized Epstein's behavior to young girls. Marchenko, who came from Eastern Europe as a teenager, became part of his inner circle, flying on his private jets and living in his homes. She was seen as both victim and accomplice, allegedly bringing in other girls while still under his control. Together, they created a system that looked glamorous on the private planes, luxury estates, global connections. But underneath, it was built on trafficking and abuse. Epstein didn't just get off easy. He got one of the sketchiest deals in modern history. Prosecutors quietly gave him a secret plea deal. He pled guilty to minor state charges, served just thirteen months in a Cushy County jail, was even allowed to leave six days a week for work release. To him being an agent, I have no knowledge about that. We can get back to you on that. Was even allowed to leave six days a week for work release. The victims weren't even told until the entire thing was done.

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The speaker describes their initial impression of Peter Nygard as arrogant and serious. Nygard invites the speaker to his warehouse to pick out outfits for a photoshoot in the Bahamas. While at the airport, Nygard asks to hold onto the speaker's ID. Upon arriving at Nygard's property, the speaker is introduced to a woman who reveals that having sex with Nygard is expected. The speaker refuses, but the woman insists. Reluctantly, the speaker witnesses Nygard and the woman engaging in intercourse. The next night, the speaker is forced to have sex with Nygard against their will. Feeling trapped and unable to escape, the speaker complies. This pattern continues for another night.

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The investigation centers on Mike Jeffries, the former head of Abercrombie and Fitch, and explores allegations of exploitation and abuse. Investigators spoke with men who claim they were exploited. One person described Jeffries as a deviant and a predator, suggesting the public perception differs from reality. One person stated that Jeffries' organization was very powerful and wealthy. Another person stated that Abercrombie recruiters had sex with men and could destroy them. One person stated they were overwhelmed by what they saw.

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The recent lawsuit alleges that Nygard paid law enforcement and government officials in the Bahamas for protection. It is known that he funneled millions of dollars into the ruling party's campaigns. A video shows Nygard celebrating the party's election win and shaking hands with cabinet members. The level of corruption in the Bahamas is significant, allowing individuals like Nygard to get away with illegal activities by giving money to the right people. Nygard had a plan and invited politicians from both parties to achieve his goals. He even requested that money be hidden in fish and delivered to a parliamentarian's house. It is difficult to report these activities as police officers and politicians are involved.

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Former fashion mogul Peter Nygard has been found guilty of 4 counts of sexual assault, but acquitted of a 5th count and charged with forcible confinement. Five complainants testified that they were invited to Nygard's Toronto headquarters and sexually assaulted in a top floor bedroom suite. Nygard denied all allegations. One witness mentioned seeing him inappropriately touch a child in 2019 and facing backlash within the company for speaking up. Seeking justice has been a challenging journey for the witness, who felt emotional upon seeing Nygard after his guilty verdict. The witness emphasizes that this is a significant day for many survivors.

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Yesterday, at the Department of Justice, I spent several hours reading the unredacted files and the absolutely horrific and depraved messages exchanged among rich and powerful people across every sphere of influence. These individuals sit at the top of governments, academic institutions, giant corporations, and hold positions such as cabinet secretaries. The messages show they absolutely believed they were above the law, above morals, and immune to societal norms. They joked in these emails about pedophiles, about horrific sexual acts with young girls, and about creating spaces—entire islands even—where they could do anything they wanted and get away with it because of their wealth, power, and connections. This was a massive global sex trafficking ring with thousands of victims that we know of and thousands more that we probably don't. So when the DOJ says that there is nothing to investigate, we, the American people, must rise up. We must allow the courage and determination of the survivors who have spoken out at great risk to themselves to push us to never give up until every single one of these predators and pedophiles and predator protectors is brought to justice. It is the voices of the survivors ringing through in the darkness of all of this horror that has gotten us this far. And in speaking to so many of them myself, I know that this effort is not just for them. They're not doing this just for them. They're doing it for their girls, for their children, for other people who have been affected, to all the survivors of sexual assault everywhere across the world who are watching to see if we can get accountability right here in The United States Of America. Many rich and powerful people thought over the decades that they got away with this. They definitely did. You can see it in the emails. But as Lauren said to me the other day, the earth is shaking because every single one of them now is becoming known. And around the world, princes, ambassadors, even prime ministers are being brought down for their participation in this global sex trafficking ring.

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The recent lawsuit alleges that Nygard paid law enforcement and government officials in the Bahamas for protection. It is known that he funneled millions of dollars into the ruling party's campaigns. A video shows Nygard celebrating the party's election win and shaking hands with cabinet members. The level of corruption in the Bahamas is significant, allowing individuals like Nygard to get away with a lot by giving money to the right people. Nygard had a plan and invited politicians from both parties to achieve his goals. He even requested that money be hidden in fish and delivered to a parliamentarian's house. It is difficult to report these activities as police officers and politicians are involved.

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Three women filed complaints with the Human Rights Commission about sexual harassment at Nygard. The newspaper published a package of stories on the issue, which generated a strong response. Yanda Hundreup, one of the women, shared her experience of being raped by Peter Nygard in a Hong Kong hotel room. The investigation revealed a pattern of misconduct and raised questions about the company's HR department and widespread knowledge of the issue. The publisher, Rudy Redekopf, considered stopping further stories due to pressure from advertisers, costing the newspaper $1 million. This decision was a disappointment for the newsroom, as it prevented them from exposing the truth and identifying those who supported Nygard.

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Three women filed complaints with the Human Rights Commission about sexual harassment at Nygard. The newspaper received a tip and published a series of stories about the allegations. One woman, Yanda Hundreup, claimed she was raped by Peter Nygard in a Hong Kong hotel room. As more women came forward, it became clear that there was a pattern of misconduct. However, the newspaper faced pressure from advertisers and the business community to stop running the stories. The publisher decided to kill the story, citing the loss of advertising revenue. The opportunity to expose the truth was lost.

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This team of young people bravely confronted someone who seemed intimidating but turned out to be insignificant. The experience of being in the same room with him, after years of fear, was surprising. Initially terrified and overwhelmed before the trial, the speaker had a breakdown just days before. However, once in court, facing him revealed he was just a phantom, lacking real power. The realization that he was nothing and that fear was unfounded was astonishing. It highlighted that it was the people around him who gave him strength, not him as an individual.

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Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard was charged in the United States with sex trafficking, racketeering, and other crimes involving dozens of women and underage girls, in a case spanning three countries and nearly three decades. The 79-year-old was arrested by Canadian police and extradited to the US to face trial. Federal prosecutors say Nygard, who owns a namesake clothing company and is among Canada’s wealthiest people, recruited and maintained victims for sex in the US, Canada, and The Bahamas since 1995, and that some victims were drugged. He allegedly targeted vulnerable women from disadvantaged backgrounds, taking them to company-funded “pamper parties” with food and spa services and to swingers clubs, then intimidated them to have sex with him or other men. He used threats of arrest, reputational harm, and lawsuits to silence potential accusers, according to the indictment. The lawsuit alleges that when Nygard became aware of the investigation into his sex-trafficking activities, he resorted to violence, intimidation, bribery, and payoffs to silence victims and continue the scheme. It also claims Nygard kept a database of potential victims maintained by the Nygard Companies Corporation IT Department on a corporate server, mostly in the United States, containing information on over 2,500 underage girls and women by the mid-2000s. The case notes the death of Nygard’s head of IT, Dane Clifford, shortly after The New York Times began investigating the story, at age 44. The accusations surrounding Nygard and his “Pamper Party Island” have drawn comparisons to allegations against Jeffrey Epstein, prompting questions about similar networks. Separately, a class action suit filed in Manhattan includes 57 unnamed women accusing Nygard of sexual misconduct. In Toronto, a sentencing hearing began for Nygard. He was found guilty last fall of four counts of sexual assault. Victims testified about lasting harm, including panic attacks, ruined self-esteem, and thoughts of suicide; testifying in court was described as horrendous. The Crown asked the judge to sentence Nygard to fifteen years in jail, arguing that given his age (83), declining health, and ongoing proceedings in Manitoba, Quebec, and the US, there is little chance he will reoffend or be rehabilitated.

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Six women who experienced trauma from Epstein’s network speak together for the first time in an exclusive NBC News interview, sharing familiar patterns of grooming, promises, and then sexual assault. The group notes that the nature of this abuse conditions silence, isolation, secrecy, and shame. One survivor, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, says Epstein associate Ghislain Maxwell recruited her when she was working as a locker room attendant at Mar-a-Lago, and that Epstein directed her to have sex with a number of powerful men, including Britain's Prince Andrew. Virginia recounts being 17 when a photo was taken with Prince Andrew in Maxwell's London townhouse, next to the bathroom where she says he sexually abused her. She describes waking to be told she would meet a prince, being trafficked to the encounter, and later being with Prince Andrew in London, then in New York at Epstein’s mansion and at Andrew’s Virgin Islands estate. She says Prince Andrew abused her two more times, while he denies the allegations, and Buckingham Palace reiterates that the duke had no sexual contact or relationship with Virginia, calling the contrary claim false and without foundation. Virginia says the abuse moved from the bathroom to a bedroom, and recounts a night in Club Tramp where Prince Andrew bought her alcohol, and she was told to do for him what she did for Epstein. She acknowledges the difficulty and says that the law of statute of limitations affects pursuing accountability, noting that defamation suits are a route to hold Ghislain Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein accountable in the absence of criminal charges. Maxwell has denied the accusations, and Epstein died by suicide in jail while awaiting trial on child sex trafficking and conspiracy charges. The six women share a common desire for justice: to hold perpetrators accountable who helped or participated with Epstein, and to encourage more survivors to come forward to piece together how Epstein operated for so long and how he evaded accountability. The interview conveys the survivors’ sense of betrayal and questions about why they were not taken seriously, with a emphasis on the impact of Epstein’s death on their sense of justice. The participants emphasize that they matter, and they send a message to other potential victims who may still be waiting in the shadows. The group’s solidarity is highlighted as a powerful and compelling element of the interview, illustrating the enduring strength of survivors who have stood together to tell their stories.

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My name is Haley Robson. I came out in 2019 on the documentary Filthy Rich. I have been very focused on bringing more awareness to all of the survivors. To the women who chose this moment to come out for the very first time about your abuse, I cannot think of a more important, greater purpose in life than to stand in solidarity. Thank you for choosing this moment for the first time to be so brave to come out and stand in solidarity. Virginia, Sky, Danielle, and Carolyn. Their voices were just as powerful, and they were silenced just as much. Shame on you for using our trauma to weaponize this moment. We are the keys to this situation. We have the truth. The FBI knows the truth. The government knows the truth. Your time is up, and now we're doing it.

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The speaker's first impression of Peter Nygard was that he was arrogant and serious. Nygard invited her to his warehouse to pick outfits for a photoshoot in the Bahamas. While at the airport, he asked to hold onto her ID, which she didn't think much of. Arriving at Nygard's property, she was shown around by a woman who revealed that having sex with Nygard was expected. The speaker refused, but the woman offered to take her place for the first night. Reluctantly, the speaker listened to Nygard and the woman engaging in intercourse. The next night, she was forced to have sex with Nygard against her will. Feeling trapped and unable to leave, she complied.

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We need to address the power players who are causing this issue. Although it may seem impossible to touch them now, we cannot ignore them. Epstein, for example, was hiding in plain sight and everyone knew about his illegal activities, but no one took action due to fear. However, things have changed. We are no longer afraid and we will go after them. Their house of cards is about to crumble, and if they don't leave the country, they will be caught and made examples of. This is what we should be doing with these guys.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Jeffrey Epstein: A Megyn Kelly Show True Crime Special
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Welcome to the Megyn Kelly Show, where today we delve into the life of Jeffrey Epstein, a notorious figure in American crime history. Epstein's story intertwines with powerful political and entertainment figures, raising questions about how a man with no formal education amassed immense wealth while engaging in sex trafficking. Barry Levine, author of "The Spider: Inside the Criminal Web of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell," discusses Epstein's early life in a modest Coney Island home, his ambition to become wealthy, and his eventual rise through grifting and manipulation on Wall Street. Despite being labeled a mathematical genius, Epstein's career was marred by unethical practices, leading to his downfall. Levine highlights Epstein's ability to navigate two contrasting worlds—one of wealth and power, and another of darkness and abuse. His connection with Les Wexner, a major client, opened doors to influential circles, allowing Epstein to exploit his relationships for financial gain and to recruit young girls. Ghislaine Maxwell entered Epstein's life in 1991, becoming a key figure in his operations. Levine describes her as a facilitator who helped recruit young women under the guise of mentorship. The pair's relationship was marked by manipulation and abuse, with Maxwell playing a crucial role in the trafficking network. Victims like Maria Farmer and Virginia Roberts have come forward, detailing their experiences of abuse and recruitment. Despite their bravery, many faced challenges in seeking justice due to systemic failures and the powerful connections Epstein wielded. Levine discusses the complexities surrounding Epstein's 2008 plea deal, which allowed him to serve minimal time for serious crimes, and the subsequent investigation that led to his 2019 arrest. The mystery of Epstein's death in jail raises further questions about the extent of his connections and the secrets he may have taken with him. As the trial of Ghislaine Maxwell unfolds, Levine expresses hope for justice, emphasizing her complicity in Epstein's crimes and the need for accountability for those involved in the trafficking network.

Breaking Points

Saagar EXCLUSIVE: Epstein Admitted GUILT In Hacked Emails
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A clipping of Jeffrey Epstein’s private communications and related reporting reveals a chilling portrait of how power, privilege, and a high-powered legal team intersected with a sprawling network of clients, friends, and financiers. The episode walks through a leaked email Epstein wrote to himself in 2007, which acknowledges explicit concern about underage victims and treats the numbers as a potential wider problem, effectively admitting a scope beyond what was publicly disclosed. The hosts trace how this internal hesitance, paired with memoranda and drafts from Epstein’s circle, fed into a controversial sweetheart deal that allowed a non-prosecution agreement despite dozens of confirmed minors, highlighting the tension between local and federal interests and the leverage of influence. They connect these email threads to a larger pattern: meticulous OPSEC, frequent revisions to legal strategy, and a cascade of figures—from Alan Dershowitz to Mitch Weber and Kenneth Starr—whose roles illustrate how insiders stitched together legal arguments to minimize risk. The discussion lingers on the social and political implications, including the role of media access, FOIA-driven disclosures, and the way established power networks respond when victims and public accountability collide with elite protection. The episode ultimately argues that the raw material—emails, memos, and timelines—offers a rare glimpse into the machinery that can shield powerful offenders and complicate the pursuit of justice. topics otherTopics booksMentioned
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