EPISODE · May 27, 2026 · 17 MIN
Christina Oxenberg Dishes On Ghislaine Maxwell
from The Epstein Chronicles · host Bobby Capucci
Christina Oxenberg, a former acquaintance of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell and a second cousin of Prince Andrew, told NewsNation that Epstein’s “little black book” was not just some random social directory, but a window into the kind of world Epstein moved through: royalty, billionaires, politicians, celebrities, financiers, and social climbers orbiting a man who had somehow embedded himself among the elite despite what was already known about him. Oxenberg described Epstein and Maxwell as operating inside a social ecosystem where access, status, secrecy, and proximity to power mattered, and she suggested that the names in the book mattered because they showed how broad Epstein’s reach really was, even if the presence of a name alone does not prove criminal conduct.The broader point was that Epstein’s network remains central to the unanswered questions surrounding the case. Oxenberg framed Maxwell as someone who knew how to navigate elite circles and help Epstein gain credibility within them, while also describing the atmosphere around the pair as one filled with whispered knowledge, uncomfortable proximity, and people who were either fascinated by Epstein’s access or willing to ignore the obvious warning signs. The significance of the black book is not that every person in it was involved in Epstein’s crimes, but that it captured the machinery of his influence: the contacts, introductions, social camouflage, and powerful associations that helped him move for years through rooms where a convicted sex offender should never have been welcome.to contact me:[email protected] a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
What this episode covers
Christina Oxenberg, a former acquaintance of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell and a second cousin of Prince Andrew, told NewsNation that Epstein’s “little black book” was not just some random social directory, but a window into the kind of world Epstein moved through: royalty, billionaires, politicians, celebrities, financiers, and social climbers orbiting a man who had somehow embedded himself among the elite despite what was already known about him. Oxenberg described Epstein and Maxwell as operating inside a social ecosystem where access, status, secrecy, and proximity to power mattered, and she suggested that the names in the book mattered because they showed how broad Epstein’s reach really was, even if the presence of a name alone does not prove criminal conduct.The broader point was that Epstein’s network remains central to the unanswered questions surrounding the case. Oxenberg framed Maxwell as someone who knew how to navigate elite circles and help Epstein gain credibility within them, while also describing the atmosphere around the pair as one filled with whispered knowledge, uncomfortable proximity, and people who were either fascinated by Epstein’s access or willing to ignore the obvious warning signs. The significance of the black book is not that every person in it was involved in Epstein’s crimes, but that it captured the machinery of his influence: the contacts, introductions, social camouflage, and powerful associations that helped him move for years through rooms where a convicted sex offender should never have been welcome.to contact me:[email protected] a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
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Christina Oxenberg Dishes On Ghislaine Maxwell
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