Couverture de The Last Days Of Jeffrey Epstein

The Last Days Of Jeffrey Epstein

The Last Days Of Jeffrey Epstein

De : Bobby Capucci
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de ce contenu audio




The Last Days of Jeffrey Epstein is a long-form investigative podcast that serves as both an archive and a real-time chronicle of the events surrounding the life, imprisonment, and death of Jeffrey Epstein. From the moment of his arrest in 2019 through the unanswered questions that continue to emerge years later, the podcast follows the timeline piece by piece — examining court filings, jail records, witness statements, surveillance failures, media reports, government investigations, and newly released documents as they become public. Rather than treating the story as a closed chapter, the series approaches it as an evolving historical event whose consequences continue to ripple through politics, finance, intelligence circles, law enforcement, and the media. Every episode is designed to preserve the record while also analyzing how the narrative around Epstein has shifted over time, what information has surfaced, what remains hidden, and why the case continues to generate worldwide scrutiny.

The podcast blends archival storytelling with ongoing investigative coverage, creating a living timeline of one of the most controversial deaths in modern American history. Using court documents, deposition transcripts, inspector general reports, leaked communications, news coverage, and firsthand accounts, The Last Days of Jeffrey Epstein reconstructs the chain of events that led to Epstein’s death inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York while continuing to track the fallout that still unfolds in real time. The series does not simply revisit headlines; it documents how the story evolved, how institutions responded, how narratives changed, and how new revelations continue to reshape public understanding years later. Whether examining the failures inside MCC, the powerful figures connected to Epstein, or the unanswered questions surrounding the final days of his life, the podcast functions as both a historical archive and an ongoing examination of a case that refuses to disappear.










Copyright Bobby Capucci
Politique et gouvernement
Épisodes
  • Inside the OIG Interview: Tova Noel’s Account of the Morning Jeffrey Epstein Died (Part 6) (5/13/26)
    May 13 2026
    During the Office of Inspector General investigation into the death of Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019, correctional officer Tova Noel gave an interview describing how the morning unfolded when Epstein was discovered in his cell. According to her account, she and fellow officer Michael Thomas were assigned to monitor the Special Housing Unit overnight. Noel told investigators that when breakfast rounds began that morning, Thomas approached Epstein’s cell and noticed something was wrong. She said Thomas called out for assistance and that she moved toward the area, where Epstein was found hanging from a strip of bedding tied to the top bunk. Noel stated that Thomas entered the cell first and attempted to cut the ligature while she retrieved equipment to assist, after which they lowered Epstein to the floor so CPR could begin.

    However, the OIG investigation was highly critical of Noel’s conduct and the credibility of the circumstances she described. Investigators determined that Noel and Thomas had failed to perform the legally required inmate counts and physical security checks for hours during the night Epstein died, leaving him unmonitored in a high-risk suicide watch environment. The report also found that Noel later signed official count sheets falsely indicating that the checks had been completed, despite evidence showing they had not been. Surveillance records and other evidence suggested the officers spent large portions of the shift away from their assigned duties, and investigators concluded that their negligence created the conditions that allowed Epstein to remain unattended long enough to die. As a result, Noel’s interview with OIG was viewed less as a clear explanation of events and more as part of a broader record showing severe procedural failures and falsified documentation at the very time Epstein required the highest level of supervision.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00117759.pdf
    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    14 min
  • Inside the OIG Interview: Tova Noel’s Account of the Morning Jeffrey Epstein Died (Part 5) (5/13/26)
    May 13 2026
    During the Office of Inspector General investigation into the death of Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019, correctional officer Tova Noel gave an interview describing how the morning unfolded when Epstein was discovered in his cell. According to her account, she and fellow officer Michael Thomas were assigned to monitor the Special Housing Unit overnight. Noel told investigators that when breakfast rounds began that morning, Thomas approached Epstein’s cell and noticed something was wrong. She said Thomas called out for assistance and that she moved toward the area, where Epstein was found hanging from a strip of bedding tied to the top bunk. Noel stated that Thomas entered the cell first and attempted to cut the ligature while she retrieved equipment to assist, after which they lowered Epstein to the floor so CPR could begin.

    However, the OIG investigation was highly critical of Noel’s conduct and the credibility of the circumstances she described. Investigators determined that Noel and Thomas had failed to perform the legally required inmate counts and physical security checks for hours during the night Epstein died, leaving him unmonitored in a high-risk suicide watch environment. The report also found that Noel later signed official count sheets falsely indicating that the checks had been completed, despite evidence showing they had not been. Surveillance records and other evidence suggested the officers spent large portions of the shift away from their assigned duties, and investigators concluded that their negligence created the conditions that allowed Epstein to remain unattended long enough to die. As a result, Noel’s interview with OIG was viewed less as a clear explanation of events and more as part of a broader record showing severe procedural failures and falsified documentation at the very time Epstein required the highest level of supervision.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00117759.pdf
    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    14 min
  • Inside the OIG Interview: Tova Noel’s Account of the Morning Jeffrey Epstein Died (Part 4) (5/13/26)
    May 13 2026
    During the Office of Inspector General investigation into the death of Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019, correctional officer Tova Noel gave an interview describing how the morning unfolded when Epstein was discovered in his cell. According to her account, she and fellow officer Michael Thomas were assigned to monitor the Special Housing Unit overnight. Noel told investigators that when breakfast rounds began that morning, Thomas approached Epstein’s cell and noticed something was wrong. She said Thomas called out for assistance and that she moved toward the area, where Epstein was found hanging from a strip of bedding tied to the top bunk. Noel stated that Thomas entered the cell first and attempted to cut the ligature while she retrieved equipment to assist, after which they lowered Epstein to the floor so CPR could begin.

    However, the OIG investigation was highly critical of Noel’s conduct and the credibility of the circumstances she described. Investigators determined that Noel and Thomas had failed to perform the legally required inmate counts and physical security checks for hours during the night Epstein died, leaving him unmonitored in a high-risk suicide watch environment. The report also found that Noel later signed official count sheets falsely indicating that the checks had been completed, despite evidence showing they had not been. Surveillance records and other evidence suggested the officers spent large portions of the shift away from their assigned duties, and investigators concluded that their negligence created the conditions that allowed Epstein to remain unattended long enough to die. As a result, Noel’s interview with OIG was viewed less as a clear explanation of events and more as part of a broader record showing severe procedural failures and falsified documentation at the very time Epstein required the highest level of supervision.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com



    source:

    EFTA00117759.pdf
    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    13 min
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
Aucun commentaire pour le moment