The Push to Forget Epstein Is the Red Flag Itself (4/14/26) episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 14, 2026 · 18 MIN

The Push to Forget Epstein Is the Red Flag Itself (4/14/26)

from The Vault: The Epstein Files · host Bobby Capucci

Calls to “move on” from Jeffrey Epstein are not just tone-deaf—they reek of institutional self-preservation. The push to close the book on one of the most expansive, well-connected child sex trafficking operations in modern history ignores the deep rot that enabled it. Epstein operated for decades with the help of governments, banks, intelligence-linked figures, celebrities, and elite gatekeepers. Telling the public to let it go doesn’t signal closure—it signals fear. Fear that people are getting too close to the truth. Fear that the wrong names might finally surface. And fear that the illusion of justice might shatter under the weight of what Epstein’s network really was: not just one predator, but a system designed to protect him.Worse still, the dismissiveness insults the pain and courage of the over 1,000 women and girls who were exploited by Epstein and his associates. These weren’t isolated incidents—they were industrialized abuses, documented in flight logs, sealed depositions, and sealed bank records. To move on now is to erase them. It’s to say their trauma doesn’t matter, their lives don’t matter, and that the powerful people who allowed it to happen will never be held accountable. Sweeping it under the rug isn’t healing—it’s complicity. The moment we stop demanding justice is the moment we guarantee it happens again.to contact me:[email protected]:Epstein followers in shambles as their conspiracies are falling apart

Calls to “move on” from Jeffrey Epstein are not just tone-deaf—they reek of institutional self-preservation. The push to close the book on one of the most expansive, well-connected child sex trafficking operations in modern history ignores the deep rot that enabled it. Epstein operated for decades with the help of governments, banks, intelligence-linked figures, celebrities, and elite gatekeepers. Telling the public to let it go doesn’t signal closure—it signals fear. Fear that people are getting too close to the truth. Fear that the wrong names might finally surface. And fear that the illusion of justice might shatter under the weight of what Epstein’s network really was: not just one predator, but a system designed to protect him.Worse still, the dismissiveness insults the pain and courage of the over 1,000 women and girls who were exploited by Epstein and his associates. These weren’t isolated incidents—they were industrialized abuses, documented in flight logs, sealed depositions, and sealed bank records. To move on now is to erase them. It’s to say their trauma doesn’t matter, their lives don’t matter, and that the powerful people who allowed it to happen will never be held accountable. Sweeping it under the rug isn’t healing—it’s complicity. The moment we stop demanding justice is the moment we guarantee it happens again.to contact me:[email protected]:Epstein followers in shambles as their conspiracies are falling apart

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The Push to Forget Epstein Is the Red Flag Itself (4/14/26)

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This episode is 18 minutes long.

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This episode was published on April 14, 2026.

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Calls to “move on” from Jeffrey Epstein are not just tone-deaf—they reek of institutional self-preservation. The push to close the book on one of the most expansive, well-connected child sex trafficking operations in modern history ignores the deep...

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