Jeffrey Epstein: The Myths, The Facts, And What's Still Missing
Millions of emails, photos, videos, and more have come out about Jeffrey Epstein over the past few months. But aside from an often-salacious look at the lives of the famous and powerful, have we learned anything important? Investigative journalist Jay Beecher has spent six years investigating the case. He spends a full hour offering his insights into the new documents. Beecher answers a whole range of major questions, including: Was Epstein a Mossad agent? How did he get his money? Who is really the biggest villain in this entire saga? Watch every episode ad-free on members.charliekirk.com! Get new merch at charliekirkstore.com!Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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All right.
Welcome back to the Charlie Kirk Show.
Hour two is now underway.
And as promised, we are going to dive headlong into everything Epstein.
And we told you yesterday we wanted to do it right.
And I had been hearing this gentleman's name mentioned in multiple different places as the guy that's been working on this for years and has interviewed all of the main players, maybe not all, but darn near all, including Jeffrey Epstein's brother and many of the alleged victims and so on and so forth.
And so without further ado, we're going to welcome him onto the show.
His name's Jay Beecher.
He's an investigative journalist.
He's British, so he also has an accent.
You can find him at Substack, substack.com forward slash at Jay Beecher.
There's a lot to talk about.
It's a lot to talk about.
So welcome to the show, Jay.
Honored to have you from the mother island there in the UK.
So just by way of introduction for our audience that doesn't know who you are and what you've been up to, how long have you been working on investigating the Jeffrey Epstein saga and maybe just some of the people that you've interviewed along the way?
Yeah, sure.
So I got into the story by reading just a generic article about one of the allegations made by Virginia Geoffrey, one of the most vocal Epstein accusers.
And I was just going to write a basic article and, you know, sort of copying what she said.
And then I started to find some contradictions in there and it led me down a rabbit hole.
And six years, this is six years ago.
So for the past six years, I've been traveling the world really interviewing Jeffrey Epstein's brother, some of the Maxwell family, but also Professor Alan Dershowitz, Virginia Geffrey's inner circle, and the accused and the accusers.
So at the moment, the media just go one side and have only really, they'll interview the accusers.
They'll print the allegations verbatim.
There's very minimal fact-checking involved there, just looking for sensational headlines.
So I wanted to get both sides of the story so that people can make up their own minds and see the full facts.
Well, so, you know, we talked.
I did a little bit of a pre-interview call with you just because I wanted to understand where you were coming from on all of this.
Your substack goes into great detail.
I encourage people to check it out there.
What brings us to this point now?
There was a Transparency Act passed.
President Trump signed it despite some of his misgivings.
Which I feel a lot of his misgivings have panned out because what he said when he was opposing it, he said, there's going to be a lot of stuff in this that's going to hurt innocent people.
Hurt innocent people kind of lead to a lot of wild allegations and certainly embarrassing true stuff for a lot of people.
We've seen that about Bill Gates.
We've seen that about Elon.
Summers, Elon Musk, for example.
Certainly, some people have had real things embarrass them.
But it also, at least, you can correct me if I'm wrong, Jay, but I don't feel that it's blown open what some people were saying would be revealed like a massive blackmail ring or the like.
And let me put a pin on that because a fine point.
You said something.
You said, we don't need to sensationalize the lies because the truth is sensational enough.
And I think that's a really good guiding principle for this whole conversation.
Again, the whole hour about it.
So explain how we got here and what some of the new evidence is.
And then I want to go through name by name, allegation by allegation.
Yeah, sure.
So, you know, it stems back to a man being arrested for having sex.
Well, he didn't actually have sex, but having a sexual encounter with underage girls.
So this took place because originally Jeffrey Epstein was a typical sort of Hugh Hefner type.
He liked to be surrounded by attractive women and he was a creep.
Let's not, there's no whitewashing of Jeffrey Epstein.
He was an absolute creep and a pervert.
But he did surround himself with girls between the ages of 18 and around about 25, some of them a bit older.
So nothing illegal there.
It wasn't until Virginia Geoffrey came onto the scene.
And Jeffrey at this time was well known for telling the girls, if you bring me more girls, I will give you extra money.
It's sort of like a finder's fee.
So we use this term recruitment and it's quite sinister.
It was more of sort of introductions.
Sleazy as hell, obviously.
But Virginia took it upon herself to, whereas Jeffrey Epstein didn't actually ask to get underage girls, Virginia went into her local community and got vulnerable schoolgirls who were around about 14, some of them are 16, 17, etc.
And all of this is documented in the police reports.
Virginia got them to lie about their ages.
Another girl called Hayley Robson, who was recruited by Virginia, got these girls to lie about their ages.
So she would put them in makeup.
She would put them in clothes that made them look more adult.
And then she would drive them to Jeffrey Epstein.
And once in the house, Jeffrey is actually documented as asking, Are you over 18?
And the girls admitted to the police that they had lied and said that they were over 18.
So long story short, one of them spilled the beans.
Jeffrey Epstein was arrested because he had committed a felony, even though he didn't know their age.
You know, and he took a lie detector test.
The lie detector test proved that he was telling the truth, that he didn't know that they were under 18.
But either way, he committed a crime.
He went to prison.
The story would have died there if it were not for the fact that Jeffrey Epstein was friends and associated with some of the most famous and richest people in the world, some of the most influential people, from presidents to prime ministers, Hollywood stars, directors, all sorts of people.
And so the media wanted to latch onto this.
Then, at this halfway through the time, the story actually did go quite quiet.
Then you had the QAnon, you had Pizzagate shortly before that, talking about elite trafficking networks at play.
Then you had the Me Too movement come up right in the middle of all of this.
And so people were focused on the Jeffrey Epstein scandal again.
You had the original victims, and they are victims because they were underage.
You know, these schoolgirls, although they lied about their ages, they still were vulnerable young schoolgirls.
They started filing some lawsuits.
There were about six different girls, maybe a few more.
And then the lawyers thought this is a great way to make some money.
And then all these salacious stories came out.
So you had Alan Dershowitz accused, falsely accused by Virginia Geoffrey.
And this is the lawyer of Donald Trump.
You had Donald Trump falsely accused by a woman, and it turned out to have been orchestrated.
It was a hoax that was orchestrated actually by a producer of the Jerry Springer show.
And, but then Virginia had fed into this narrative.
She, this Pizzagate conspiracy of a global trafficking network, she accused, said that she'd slept with foreign presidents and then later admitted that she'd never met any in her life.
But that wasn't picked up by the media intentionally because that destroyed the narrative.
And so it's dragged on and on and on.
And then it became heavily politicized because it's become a great smear campaign.
Anybody who was ever, you know, snapped with in a photograph of Jeffrey Epstein, anyone who had a cup of tea or a coffee with him, or some of his friends who had business dealings with him, they were suddenly targeted via guilt by association.
And then there was a big buildup.
How can we turn this against Donald Trump?
Well, exactly.
Yeah, well, and that's, and Jay.
I've been critical of him.
Yeah, of course.
I mean, I don't consider you to be some fan of President Trump.
I, you know, it's interesting because I do think that you mentioned the Pizzagate, the Me Too, QAnon, all of that stuff.
And the confluence of those stories mixed with President Trump coming into power and everybody understood that President Trump knew Jeffrey Epstein and associated with him.
So we really have to sort of start there with the President Trump allegations because that was long the assumption is that we were going to find that President Trump had done some untoward things with underage women, you know, yes or no, and then expound on it.
Did President, has President Trump been, is there anything in there that would be criminal, that would be salacious even, embarrassing?
Absolutely nothing.
Absolutely nothing.
And I think it's very telling.
So the reason, only reason I agree with Donald Trump on certain policies, I disagree with him on others.
I think that's healthy with politicians.
I'm not one of these, you know, believe them in everything.
But I have not found a single piece of evidence to suggest that Donald Trump has done anything wrong at all.
He was bound to have been in the, he was in the same social circles as Jeffrey Epstein.
We know that he had a friendship with Jeffrey Epstein at one time, and then he ended that relationship.
And what's very telling is that from the very beginning, none of these vocal accusers and some of the genuine victims, absolutely none of them have accused him of doing anything wrong.
In fact, Virginia Geffrey herself said that he was a gentleman, you know, that he didn't do anything bad whatsoever.
Jay, I will let you continue here in a sec, but it's very funny to me that I feel like that's a pattern we've had for over a decade at this point.
Like when you think of how scrutinized Donald Trump's entire existence has been, every business relationship he's ever had, every political engagement he's ever had.
And now this, it kind of is remarkable how clean he ends up coming out of everything.
They couldn't get anything on his business other than, oh, he like he lied to get a loan that no one complained about other than the state of New York.
I don't know.
I'm just digressing here.
But yeah, it's funny here, even on this, you know, he could have had something like Bill Gates, where it's not necessarily criminal, but it's like highly embarrassing.
And they don't even have that, it seems.
And you're, I believe, you're, as you said, a man who's criticized the president a lot.
Yeah.
So I've, with regards to Ukraine, I criticize him heavily and I have criticized him quite heavily in the past.
I've supported him in the past in certain things.
I do it with all politicians.
I'm not really a, you know, sort of a, I pick a team and stick with it no matter what.
But on this, 1 million percent, he is, they are just weaponizing it to try and attack it.
And I think they're devastated that they found no ammunition against him.
And it's sort of backfired.
I really do.
So, Jay, I asked you a very pointed question.
And I said, besides, when we were talking before, I said, besides Jeffrey Epstein, because I do believe Jeffrey Epstein is a creep.
He's a sleaze.
He was a crook and a fraudster, actually.
And we can get into that.
But who are the villains of this story?
Because that is what's driving a lot of this.
They want to see the list.
They want to see who was sleeping with underage girls.
And you gave me a very surprising answer.
What was that?
If people want to, so I do not victim shame or anything like that, because what I'm trying to do is expose the genuine victims in all of this.
And there are genuine victims.
And those victims are the people who were recruited by adults.
They were adults at the time.
Virginia Duffray, Haley Robinson, and a couple of others.
And yet, that's the backwardsness in all of this.
They have been projected as the heroes of the story, when in fact they were the villains.
And they have admitted that they went out of their way to target, groom, and recruit underage girls, schoolgirls, get them to lie about their ages, and take them to a rich guy who they knew would then abuse them.
And yet the media, because that does not fit the narrative, they refuse to cover that.
They have just canonized these people.
And anybody who criticizes them is called a victim shamer.
I've interviewed Virginia DuFray's ex-partner, and he's openly admitted that whilst he was over 18, he was hunting down schoolgirls to sell to Jeffrey Epstein.
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All right, more with Jay Beecher.
Jay, I asked you who the villain was, and you said that there are real victims, these underage girls that were recruited.
They were dressed up in fancy clothes and makeup, and they were told to lie about their age.
Apparently, it sounds like Jeffrey Epstein asked if they were over 18.
I'm not saying what Jeffrey Epstein was doing is okay, by the way.
That's that's gross.
That I just don't think that's even up for debate.
Like, I don't, Jeffrey Epstein's a creep, a crook, a fraudster.
And whatever.
That's not really been up for debate.
That's never been up for everything else that, but how did this happen and who else was involved is really the central question.
And you're telling me that Virginia Guffery, I believe I'm saying her name right, is implicated.
The police know it, that she was the one that was going out grooming these young women.
And she had an accomplice.
I forget the name.
And then that begs the question: what was Gheline Maxwell doing?
Was she aware that these underage women were getting recruited?
Well, that's the travesty in all of this: is that the media just refused to report the truth because it doesn't fit the narrative.
And it was Virginia Geoffrey and a girl called Haley Robson, who Virginia had introduced to Jeffrey Epstein, who were going out of their way to find schoolgirls to make money.
It was all financially motivated.
They knew what they were doing.
I have interviewed the mother of one of Virginia's victims.
So Caroline Andiaranio, sadly, was groomed by Virginia, given drugs, put on this life of prostitution, and eventually she was found dead in a hotel room, allegedly of a drug overdose.
And so she destroyed Virginia, destroyed a lot of lives.
But at the time, the Me Too mantra was believe all women.
And the media were very adamant that they didn't want to deviate from that whatsoever.
So Virginia's story was newsworthy.
It was brilliant for journalists because here she is saying that she'd slept with foreign presidents, that she'd slept with a Prince of England, and just making all of these wild, headline-grabbing, sensational claims that they didn't want to fact-check it.
They didn't want to fact-check any of it.
So if you want to look at the villains in this story, it is Virginia, it's Haley Robson, and a couple of others.
So if I and Virginia's ex-partner, who I interviewed, and he quite casually just talks about how he went out of his way to find schoolgirls and girls to recruit because he thought, well, that's an extra $200.
And there's no shame there.
The police know about it.
He's admitted it on record to me and also in his affidavits, you know, his depositions.
And yet he's never been prosecuted.
Virginia has been acknowledged with foolproof and has admitted that she recruited schoolgirls while she herself was an adult, but they refused to prosecute her.
The police wanted to prosecute Haley Robson, but then it went higher up and they decided to drop it and only go after Epstein.
Now, Epstein did take a lie detector test.
The police were quite annoyed because the result came back that he was telling the truth that he didn't know that they were underage.
Fast forward 10 years or so, and suddenly you've got all these lawsuits coming in.
You've got journalists who want to write stories because it's making them a lot of money.
And you've got lawyers who want these articles and headlines out there because it's making them a lot of money.
They've made over 100 million so far, just the lawyers alone.
Because what they were doing, the lawyers, and this is well documented, they would get an accusation, they would approach the person who was accused, and then they would try to say, if you don't want this going into the press, don't want to be smeared, pay up.
And that's well documented.
There are even there are emails in the Epstein files of the lawyers discussing this.
And they've even talked about how they can first represent the accusers and then represent the accused and make sure that they keep these stories out of the headlines.
I've listened to a secret recording taken by Alan Dershowitz, where David Boyce, who represented Virginia, admitted to him that he knew that Virginia was wrong, in his words, wrong, completely wrong to accuse him.
But he said, if you pay up, find some, in his words, Jewish lawyers, some rabbis, those were his words, pay up, and this will go away.
Now, that's blackmail, it's extortion.
And they would use the press, weaponize the press with Prince Andrew.
That catapulted the story back into the headline news across the world.
Because here you had.
I want to come in there.
You just mentioned David Boyce.
That's not going to be a name most people are familiar with, but that is a superstar lawyer.
He's been involved in, among other things, he represented Theranos, which was that blood analysis company that was a huge scam.
He's represented Harvey Weinstein.
So he's certainly not deeply motivated, I would say, by protecting victims necessarily.
He can play both sides of that.
He represented Al Gore and Bush v. Gore.
This is a celebrity guy who's certainly been involved in high profile.
And frankly, he's worked for some sinister actors, as we know with Theranos.
And so it would be entirely believable for him to be a sinister actor in this case as well.
And in the Faranaus case, he was found, him and his team, to have intimidated the whistleblowers.
In this instance, what his MO seems to have been is to, so let's take the Prince Andrew case, the allegations as an example.
He knows that they're not true.
Virginia had originally claimed that she didn't sleep with Prince Andrew at all.
Then she claimed that she had sex with Prince Andrew in New Mexico.
She wrote three pages going into law of detail saying they went horseback riding together, had sex in the bathroom with champagne.
Then under oath, she admitted she had never happened.
She'd never been to New Mexico, Prince Andrew.
Then she changed it to that she'd had an audi with Prince Andrew on the island.
But then it was shown to her that she'd already written about this audio and it was actually, she claimed, with Jean-Luc Brunel, not with Prince Andrew.
But they knew this, the lawyers, and yet they don't want to drop that.
The journalists want to keep it going because they're making money from producing clickbait.
And the lawyers want to get money from it.
Now, Prince Andrew, when it comes to him as well, what David Boyce would do is, and he said this during an interview with Piers Morgan, if he doesn't settle out of court, if he doesn't pay up, I will depose Megan Markle, I'll depose his daughters, I'll depose all of his family.
Knowing that that can't happen because the royal family wouldn't allow it to happen.
The judge at the same time refused to allow him to submit certain evidence from proving that Virginia had made false allegations against him.
And the lawyers have been working with politicians even now to get all of this together.
Jay, we've got so much to get to here.
I want to make sure we're moving quickly.
So I have a thousand questions for you.
Did, and we've got this, I didn't, we've got Boyce with Guffery here, a picture that we could throw up here, which so just to kind of add a visual element to this, just so everybody can see this.
Do you believe that Virginia committed suicide?
I know her dad has said that he doesn't think that that was the case.
You just never know what to believe anymore with this, if I'm honest.
So you've got she, I think she likely did.
The reason that I believe that is because her web of lies was so she stacked a lie upon a lie upon a lie.
And I think it was slowly beginning to collapse because she was about to be deposed for the very first time.
She was going to have her very first court appearance because she was being sued by Rena Rowe, who I've interviewed quite a lot.
And because she'd made a false statement against Rina.
And so, whereas she, if you look into her past history, she's always settled out of court.
So, with Alan Dershowitz, she settled out of court, not financially, but she admitted that she was mistaken in accusing him.
Well, she wasn't mistaken.
She lied.
But with Reena, she was trying and trying to prevent herself from being dragged into court.
And the judge, two weeks before she committed suicide, had ruled that no, whatever happens, you must come into court and testify.
Now, while she's in the courtroom, the defense lawyers, so Rena Rose's lawyers, sorry, would have grilled her.
And I know this for a fact because I helped them with certain information.
They were using, there's a photograph of Rena Rowe leaving the courtroom with a 200-page report that I did, just compiling all of Virginia's lies with the evidence.
And so what they were preparing to do was to use that as an opportunity to finally, under oath, force Virginia to admit the truth.
And she would have been shown all of this evidence and she would have been confronted with it.
And now it would have been covered by the newspapers.
You also at the same time had her marriage breakdown.
Her kids were taken away from her, which is very rare.
You know, you don't often see children being taken away from the mother and the mother losing custody.
So her life was sort of caving in.
Yeah, it does seem that's a, I think, a strong narrative.
But so bigger picture, I think an issue I want us to talk about when people do push the idea that there's not as much here as people thought.
It's kind of a more mundane guy who had relations with underage girls, got caught, and then he also knew a lot of people, but there's not a bigger conspiracy or bigger behind the scenes thing.
Offshore Secrets00:03:53
One thing people fixate on a lot is just Jeffrey Epstein's wealth.
Even the vice president the other day was saying it should be investigated how he became so wealthy, because that seems very mysterious to people and that it must have some sort of dark explanation.
Do you have an explanation for that that would be satisfactory?
How did Jeffrey Epstein become this super rich and connected person like that?
Yeah, because I had the exact same thoughts.
How the hell did a mathematician, like just a low-level maths teacher without any degree, become so wealthy?
It was actually through fraud.
A lot of it was through fraud.
He was arrested in the, I think it was the late 80s, very early 90s.
He was involved in a, he'd left Bear Stearns.
So whilst he was a teacher, he'd been poached by one of his students' father, who was high up in Bear Stearns, and saw that he was very good with numbers, got him on board.
He made quite a lot of money there.
But then he went and left and made his own company with a partner.
And now both of them were arrested because they said it was a pyramid scheme and they were engaged in fraudulent transactions.
And Jeffrey Epstein made a hell of a lot of money, millions from that.
His partner was sent to prison.
And Jeffrey Epstein, for whatever reason, managed to get out of it.
They didn't have enough evidence.
Now his partner squealed like a pig and said, Jeffrey was just as guilty as I am.
You know, he was just as guilty as this, but he got away with it.
Then he got as a client for his next company, Leslie Wexner.
And Leslie gave him the keys to the kingdom because he was helping people to avoid paying taxes.
And he did that by setting up offshore offshore companies and shell companies in the US Virgin Islands.
And so Leslie Wexner saw, wow, this guy's good.
He's running my companies well.
He's saving me a hell of a lot of money.
I'm going to sign him power of attorney.
And he did that.
But then later on, it turned out that Epstein had stolen tens of millions of dollars from Leslie Wexner, enough.
actually just just about 25 a quarter of the money that he stole from uh wexner was enough for him to buy his island and with with more money that he'd stolen he bought his place in france his ranch and he'd already got the house in new york from leslie wexner and then also leslie wexner gave him sort of this era of aura of credibility you know he's representing wexner he could do me so Every day,
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So you're basically laying out a case, Jay, that he was good at one thing financially.
And that was shielding people from tax liabilities.
He was a tax evader, essentially.
And not even, I'd say two things, a tax evader and also kind of a confidence game man.
Tax Evader and Confidence Man00:15:05
Like he just, he wormed his way in with Wexner and maybe did valid work for the first couple of years.
And then after that, it just seems he was soaking him.
You mentioned he got that place from him.
He basically got it for what, a dollar?
He took a free $20 million home in New York off of him.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, he was rewarded.
He was seen as this great genius, sort of some asset.
I think he exaggerated himself to some extent.
He'd lied on his CB to get to Bear Stones.
But regardless, he knew how to get rich people to pay less taxes.
And that was making those shell companies in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
His island, people think that he purchased this to have secrecy and to run some sort of strange operation.
Well, no, it was originally just for the fact that if you're in the U.S. Virgin Islands, you get certain tax exemptions, you pay so much less tax than you would in the U.S.
So he set up all of these companies.
And then he was approached by Noam Chomsky, by Woody Allen.
He helped Woody Allen.
He helped Leon Black.
He had all of these different people who he would help pay less taxes.
They would filter their money into the U.S. Virgin Islands, into his shell companies.
And then obviously they avoided paying millions and millions of tax.
So they're going to like him.
Then he built up all of these connections through that and through political donations.
His political donations were not really because he believed in the politics that he was supporting.
It was because he coveted famous names and famous faces because that gave him more credibility.
They gave him more access.
And having that access and that ring of circles attracts more people to him.
Jay, I got it.
So let me just challenge the premise here, though.
I mean, is there any indication that he was a Mossad agent, that he was working with CIA?
Because you say he didn't get arrested, but his partner did.
Okay, was somebody protecting him?
Was, you know, then he's connected with Ehud Barak later on.
You know, you just, you sort of start wondering, like, why is this charmed man so charmed?
And it does he have a handler?
Does he have people that are someone looking out for him?
Yeah, that's how he gets out of things over and over.
You know, Leslie Wexner is a obviously a Jewish American.
Was there, was there a connection there that he was, you know, was he blackmailed?
Did he blackmail Wexner?
What, what is, is there any indication?
Because this, some, sometimes it feels a little too convenient.
I know what you mean.
No, I know what you mean.
It's sort of like this is the luckiest guy in the world, right?
You know, gone from being a humble maths teacher.
But there is no evidence that he was involved with Mossad, that he was in intelligence.
His former girlfriend used to joke that, you know, his son, he's so quiet and mysterious that he must be in this CIA.
And then it sort of snowballed from there.
But he did help.
So he doesn't need to be a member of an agent to influence world politics and influence, you know, some of the most influential people in the world, because we can see that in his email exchanges.
He's being contacted by some of the most powerful leaders asking him for advice.
But that tends to be more, if you read between the lines of the emails, it's more the fact of his connections.
And they're always asking him, can you connect me with this person?
So one of them, I think it was the Sultan of wherever, asked him, how do I talk to Donald Trump?
That's because he was associated with Donald Trump.
Another one asks them for an introduction with Clinton.
And they are talking about what we would deem intelligence.
He was definitely that the Russia angle needs more explanation and more investigation.
And you will start to see that over the coming weeks.
You know, isn't any involvement with Russia.
But I have not found any genuine evidence to prove that he was a member of Mossad.
And when Jeffrey Epstein was asked, so he was asked, let's think, we talk about him escaping from sort of dodging one conviction early on for fraud, but he didn't escape two major convictions.
So the first one being obviously when he was arrested in, I think it was 2007 and for sleeping with an underage girl.
And he was asked during that time by Professor Dershowitz, do you know, are you a member of any intelligence thing?
Do you have anyone who can shut this thing down?
And he didn't.
He just, he said, I don't.
I'm not like, you know, I don't have any of those connections.
And they would have exploited that.
They would have shut that down.
And then years later, again, no one came to his defense.
No one came to help him.
If he had all of this information to blackmail people, he wasn't able to pull any strings.
But Jay, and just again, to keep pressing the point.
So you spoke with Jeffrey Epstein's brother.
You've interviewed him.
He does not believe Jeffrey committed suicide.
I guess the question would be, what do you believe after speaking with Jeffrey Epstein's brother?
And if he didn't commit suicide, then it's apparent that there would be forces that wanted him dead.
Yeah.
So when this is coming out, there are a hell of a lot of people who are associated with him.
Now, some of these, though I say some of these powerful people have done nothing wrong, they are still likely, some of them may have slept with some of the women, because you've got to remember that 99% of the women that Jeffrey Epstein had were over legal age.
Some of them are registered escorts.
They're fully documented as being escorts at the time.
We don't know if he, if, if some of them had slept with them, we just don't know.
There's no way of telling.
But with regards to his death, going back to his death, I believe that there are some, it still needs a proper investigation.
And that is for my next book.
Have been investigating the dev and a few things that I can't go into right now, to be honest, but they um, there are too many unanswered questions, too many coincidences from that night, his final night.
We we forget that there was an original incident where Jeffrey Epstein was found.
There was a commotion in his cell.
Suddenly he wakes up um, suddenly they burst open the door.
They find his cellmate.
So they they the cellmate who they put him in with Nick um, claims he's innocent, etc.
I'm not going to touch on that right now.
But why did they put him in with somebody who is supposed to have committed multiple murders?
And yet they chose him as a safe and non-aggressive?
That's the term they used.
This is a non-aggressive, safe cellmate and on this incident the guards, the um, the prison officers, burst into the cell.
Jeffrey's snoring, the noose has been taken off of him and he's gone unconscious.
The first thing he says when he wakes up is, Nick tried to kill me, that his cellmate tried to kill him, excuse me now he.
He went back on that later on and said, oh, i'm confused.
But they, you know they, they think he might have been frightened into into talking about that, but he had mentioned that before that people were going to harm him.
So then you've got the CCTV cameras not working.
At the same time, you've got the the prison guards falling asleep on the watch conveniently.
You've got one who allegedly claims that a prisoner, potentially Epstein, was shipped out um just shortly before.
Now that needs um exploring properly before it's completely debunked or proven.
You never know.
But Jeffrey Epstein is a man who had the means to organize um an escape if he wanted to, but I don't believe that happened.
I believe that he died.
We just don't know if it was suicide or not.
There are, there are, multiple reasons why we shouldn't close the book as case solved on the death of Jeffrey Epstein.
Yeah, I mean that if people wanted him dead, I mean maybe it was just they were embarrassed, maybe they did sleep with some of these underage girls that were recruited by Virginia and and uh, I believe you said Haley, if i'm not right, if not yeah, Haley Robinson yeah yeah, so okay question.
So there's a lot of names that were mentioned.
Sorry, I got.
We might have the same question, which is just, there has been millions of documents that have come out there.
There is new stuff coming out.
Whatever it is, have we learned anything from it and is anyone, is there anyone who actually might be criminally implicated, even if it's just on the level of what Epstein himself was?
Yeah no, you've got sort of things that you could highlight as fraud, potentially fraudulent, that have been raised from the documents.
But I think the people who so let's look at why these were released and again it goes for political and financial is political and financially motivated.
You had the lawyers who need this to be released because they have, they still have on ongoing lawsuits.
They've got them against institutions like banks that the last one paid out over a hundred million dollars and they get up to 40 of that, the lawyers.
So it's good for them to keep this story alive and to keep these bankers and targets trembling.
And then, of course, you have the House Democrats, and i'm sorry, but they do not give a Damn about justice or victims, or they only care about going after Donald Trump, and yet nothing has been found in there.
That's why they've been pushing for it.
The lawyers, if you look into it, the uh David Boys, etc., have admitted that they've been working with the House Democrats pro bono, and they've been helping orchestrate this entire smear campaign.
And yet, what has been revealed is really disappointing for them because there isn't anything.
There are, don't get me wrong, there are some fascinating things in there, some really interesting scandals and things that arise and connections that we didn't know about, but none of them are illegal.
What you're seeing is guilt by association.
They're looking for photographs of, and it's the way that they portray them.
So, they get the media to put out the headline: a victim of Jeffrey Epstein was in the presence of Donald Trump.
But then they admit intentionally, they redact the name of the victim.
And yet, we know the victim was Virginia Jufray, and that Virginia Duffray had said, Well, no, I met Donald Trump, he was a gentleman, he did nothing wrong.
So, they're weaponizing the Epstein files.
They want to use it to keep the story alive, to confuse the hell out of the public, and to make money.
And that is what most of this is about, making money.
And from the politician side, it's about using this to keep the heat and the pressure on Donald Trump.
And yet, they are really disappointed because they've not been able to find anything explosive, and they've definitely not been able to find anything damaging against the president whatsoever.
So, I want to go through rapid fire name by name that have been implicated in this recent drop.
And so, try we've got to keep our answers tight here because we're running low on time here and there's so much to go through.
But just touch on the Pizzagate thing.
They mentioned pizza, they mentioned so, so obviously, this thing makes us think back a few years.
All the steak mentions a lot of people.
Is there anything on that?
Is there anything there that you can see?
People like pizza, people, people like pizza, people like steak.
I worked in politics before.
Where do you go for a campaign meeting?
You go to a pizza house, um, you all meet.
It's the go-to thing.
The problem is when you take thousands, tens and tens of thousands of emails and only pick out the emails that say pizza.
I bet if we looked through your emails or my emails, we would find references to pizza.
We might find some to steak.
And when they're put out there without any context, then you can spin this whole conspiracy theory and all the things.
So, you've looked at the emails in context.
Yeah, you're saying you've looked at them 100%.
And many of these emails, we've got to remember about 90% of what we're seeing in the Epstein files so far is already out there.
So, I have seen them, I've seen the context.
There is nothing sinister.
I just checked.
There's 94 emails about pizza in my Gmail.
I don't think I have any.
I keep that quiet.
We're going to end up on a list.
Jay, we see references to Goyam, Goy.
Is there any indication?
I mean, obviously, you think Mossad, you think Israeli connections, Ehud Baragi, any of that's a obviously Jeffrey Epstein's Jewish.
That's not what I think.
Well, is there anything there?
Because that's a term that would be offensive.
Did he sort of see himself as us versus them?
You know, anything there?
Well, if you go back to the context and read it in there, he's actually joking when he mentions that cohem.
I can't remember who it is now who asks him a question: Are there Jewish people there?
No, she says something like, Oh, that will be a predominantly Jewish event.
You know, it's like a dinner party or something.
And he said, No, there'll be a lot of Goyam there.
It's it's but it's tongue-in-cheek when you read his emails, and particularly the emails that he's had in exchange with this person before.
They joke and banter a lot, so it is just a tongue-in-cheek comment.
You know, it's not, there's nothing, you know, sort of like they're the master race, or, you know, there's no, there's nothing like that in there at all.
Once again, it comes down to context and reading when you learn, spend years reading how Jeffrey Epstein talks, he did actually joke quite a lot.
He did make a lot of tongue.
Did he make any references of killing people or offing people?
I've seen rumors of that.
Yeah.
So, so, you know, there were some, there's a couple of emails where he jokes about killing people and they're clearly evidence as jokes.
But then there's some accused, there's an accuser who accused him in the documents of killing certain victims.
And yet this accuser, because her name's redacted, the public don't know.
I've already looked into her and she was debunked many, many years ago as a complete fantasist.
She was found to have had a history of serious mental health problems and of making false accusations.
And those investigate those claims were investigated and found not to be credible.
So it's not like, you know, this is anything new.
Rapid fire here.
Peter Thiel, what did we learn?
Not much about Peter Thiel.
There's not much.
I've focused less on Peter Thiel.
At the moment, I've been focusing more on Prince Andrew and on Peter Mandelson and people, people like that.
And of course, Elon Musk.
Elon Musk, what did we learn?
Elon Musk.
So I had known when I very first saw Elon put out, you know, this claim that he'd photobombed, Ghillenne Maxwell had photobombed him.
I knew that to be a lie anyway, because I'd already interviewed some of Ghelen Maxwell's siblings.
And he was close friends with Ghelen Maxwell.
But they wanted to distance themselves.
Elon Musk and other people wanted to say, no, I wasn't very close with them at all.
But there isn't anything damning against Elon Musk.
Gillene's Blip in Epstein's Life00:15:58
Again, it's guilt by association.
Of course, he knew Ghillenne Maxwell.
He knew Jeffrey Epstein.
He was invited to the island, but didn't go to the island.
So there's absolutely nothing in the Epstein files that is critical about Elon Musk.
So he basically just wanted to go to a party.
And by the way, Elon Musk has been public.
He wants to see Jeffrey Epstein, the accusers, and the actual victims, these underage girls.
He wants to see justice for them.
Obviously, Jeffrey Epstein's already dead, so there's only so much you could do.
But if anybody else was involved.
So Prince Andrew, you mentioned Prince Andrew.
What did we learn and are learning about Prince Andrew?
So a lot of what you're seeing now that these headlines are saying this new revelation has been found against Prince Andrew in the Epstein files.
It's a lie.
There are allegations that have been public for many, many years and available.
People just haven't looked for them.
Like I say, going back to it with Prince Andrew, Virginia is the only person who has accused him.
He was originally, she originally claimed she didn't have sex with him at all.
Then she claimed that she had sex with him in New Mexico.
Then she claimed a few other things and admitted that it was a complete lie.
So I think that whilst he has made some, you know, made some mistakes in the past and has not helped himself with regards to this, he is innocent.
He was just cheating, though, right?
I mean, he was going, he was essentially going outside of his marriage.
We know that much, correct?
Well, you've got to remember he was divorced.
Long before he ever supposedly met Virginia Juffray, he was already divorced.
He lives still with his wife, Fergie.
But here we have, so the latest revelation that the headlines are going mad about is that a new woman has accused Prince Andrew.
She said that when she was about 24, she met Prince Andrew.
She slept with Prince Andrew, that the following morning, they woke up, had breakfast together, and he gave her a tour of Buckingham Palace, and then she said goodbye and left.
Now, that's seen as a big scandal, but here we have a single divorcee supposedly sleeping, if it's true, with an adult woman of her own free will.
And suddenly you've got the lawyer saying, you know, he must pay up more money to help her get over her trauma.
I don't know what trauma, I think he should be invoicing her.
You know, I had to pay for a tour of Buckingham Palace.
Yeah, fair enough.
Bill Gates.
Bill Gates is obviously the damning email about him supposedly getting an STI.
Now, I don't know if that's true.
Nobody knows except from Jeffrey Epstein, who's dead, and Bill Gates, who is alive, but he isn't going to go on any shows too soon.
So it could be true.
I don't know about Bill Gates, but it's very damaging for his reputation.
Not because he was associated with Jeffrey Epstein, but that I think that that one claim about him in the email from Jeffrey is going to stick with him and smear him for a long time.
So there is something you told me about that I actually found surprising, and I think it gets lost in all the noise here.
You know, my assumption was that Jeffrey Epstein was sleeping with all of these women.
This is going to be a little graphic.
So if you have young kids in the room with you right now, please earmuff or take them away.
Do your best to not be so graphic, but that's not the case, apparently.
Can you explain he had some deformities?
Do your best.
So Jeffrey Epstein has admitted this himself.
Gillen Maxwell has testified to this.
And 99% of the victims have all corroborated each other when they say this.
And yeah, apologies for being 18 plus here, but he was proven to have erectile dysfunction.
He couldn't get up, basically.
He was taking medication for that.
It wasn't working.
He was taking testosterone for that.
He was a very frustrated man.
The victims have all stated that he had a deformity as well.
He wasn't exactly the biggest of chaps.
Let's just put it that way.
And that he would not have sexual intercourse with them.
If you read the lawsuits themselves and read the testimonies, you'll see that 99% of the time he did not have sexual, like full sex with these people.
He was a person who would get, that's why the massage table was there.
He would be massaged.
And whilst the massage was happening, he would use a toy on one of the girls and he would masturbate.
That's the clean, but that's the cleanest I can put it, Andrew, I'm afraid.
But that's what we're doing.
I think people have it in their mind that it's, yeah, there were these girls around.
would want to party with jeffrey epstein and you know they might have done other things but him particularly i i that was a revelation to me because i just was assuming it's interesting how the same thing has come to play with the harvey weinstein case that he also apparently had deformities down there that hinder a lot of the Well, we were talking about this earlier.
There is a lot of psychology that's been into this.
And some of the biggest people who have committed sexual assault or prolific in committing sexual assault, a very high portion of them have found to have had erectile dysfunction or some sort of deformity.
And it internalizes their sexual frustration.
And then they lash out on or try and do it other ways, or they're so sexually charged.
And Jeffrey Epstein was the most sex-obsessed person I think I've ever read about and looked into.
And yeah, yeah, that's not talked about, but it wasn't sex.
He was into BDSM.
He was into, you know, thing, but his main thing was self-pleasure because he couldn't get anyone else to bring him to that point of satisfaction.
That's, I just, I know it's graphic and I apologize to our viewers.
I think it's important, though, to get the truth.
And the truth is, it's some sort of mix between the lies and the headlines.
And I think, you know, it's interesting.
We kind of end where we started that President Trump was probably proven right in a lot of it.
I do not support the messaging necessarily.
I think it was counterproductive.
But President Trump knew this guy was just a creep that was leeching off a lot of people and a fraudster.
And he was a kink, sexually charged, certainly, and has done a lot of bad things.
But a lot of people are getting smeared by guilt by association in this story.
And I think that's interesting.
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Blake, please, if you have any other final thoughts here, I'm not necessarily convinced he wasn't working as a sort of an agent of Israel.
I'm still very curious about that.
And I have questions about Russia.
Sure, sure.
We should do that.
I guess my card's on the table here, but people who've followed us a long time should know.
I was always a bit skeptical of this.
I've talked to Charlie about Charlie was much more open to a lot of theories on this, on JFK, on a lot of stuff.
And it was always my role to kind of say, yeah, I'm the spock of the relationship, I guess, if he's Captain Kirk.
And so I've always been a little skeptical on this.
And I guess, so I would just say there's been a lot of stuff where people have run ahead with assumptions.
And I remember even something that always stood out to me was when it was repeated over and over.
Well, they told the U.S. attorney in Miami when he was being prosecuted that Epstein belongs to intelligence.
And it was so revealing to me when I'd heard that over and over and over again.
And I kind of just assumed, oh, that must be a stone-cold fact.
And instead, it was a hearsay claim.
And one of the things we got from all these documents was we got into what that U.S. attorney said when he was asked about it in the first Trump administration.
He said, no, I actually never said that.
So it's not nearly as ironclad that that was true.
And I guess what I liked with all of this is it let us pause and say, what do we actually know stone cold for a fact versus what is stuff where innuendo has greatly outrun what you can see in hardware?
And I have a question.
I have a question related to that.
Please, but go ahead.
Well, I would say, and honestly, as a journalist, I lost my job for covering this and for putting out this, you know, looking at the other side of the story.
But I would say I became very disillusioned with the media.
So when we say what is established, I would say start at the beginning with a fresh mind.
My book, Naked Lies, is coming out soon, and that contains a lot.
But let's just look at how the media are reporting on just very basic things.
If you were to Google right now, you will find out that there's a viral claim that Jeffrey Epstein had a baby and that Sarah Ferguson emailed him to congratulate him.
And the BBC, which is a very trustworthy organization, supposedly out.
Yeah, I don't believe that, but it's considered, considered to be.
And yet I proved that actually Sarah Ferguson wasn't congratulating Epstein at all.
That email is to one of Jeffrey Epstein's friends, and then he forwards it on to Jeffrey Epstein.
In other words, look what Sarah Ferguson has said to me.
I've located the mother, I've located the father, and I've the identity of the child and even the baby scan.
That sounds a bit strange.
That's how obsessed I get.
And yet the BBC have acknowledged that it's not accurate and they haven't corrected it.
And so if that's just one thing from just yesterday, we've had nearly 20 years of this case and the media dominating the narrative.
And I promise you, there are thousands of examples that I could pull up that show that what 99% of what you think you know about the Jeffrey Epstein scandal is a lie.
So I have a question related to, again, so I still think, I'll just be honest, I'm still sort of convinced that he was either, you know, in cahoots with the CIA or, you know, working, working on behalf.
Because I just do think that, you know, Israel, you've got these, you know, Jewish Americans, Jewish, there's French Jews, there's UK Jews that, you know, they feel a kindred spirit with the homeland.
I have zero problem with that necessarily.
Jay, my idea on that, which I've shared with a few people, and I want to hear your take.
I've had the thought, what if Jeffrey Epstein insinuated himself with Ehud Barak and others because he himself believed in sort of the myth of Mossad and he thought maybe this would protect me in some way, like almost get it backwards.
He wanted to be associated with it.
Yeah.
And we know, we know that Jeffrey Epstein lied about a lot of things.
He lied in his TV.
He would tell people certain things, say that he was something that he wasn't.
So he could very well have been.
You know, we can't prove either way that he will never find out if he was or wasn't a member of Mossad or he was working for intelligence.
We can't 100% say he wasn't, but I tend to go with the evidence.
And there isn't any evidence so far that states or would suggest that he was.
We're going by how connected he was, but there are people very even more connected than he was to Israel and to other organizations.
And yet we know that they're not members of Mossad.
So we don't know, but it's unlikely.
Yeah, I think your point was well made earlier, though.
It's like, why would he have to be, you know, connected with Mossad when he could just go over the top of the intel and go straight to, you know, to sort of influence world events?
And he was a very curious person, very gregarious, interesting, apparently, to be around.
So, so, I, but I do have more questions here.
So, when he gets arrested in 2007, 2008 timeframe, he basically gets put on like the most cush house arrest imaginable.
Again, that's just one of these clues where I'm like, who's looking out for him?
I'll tell you why that is.
I can tell you why that is.
So, they had, when they first were putting their case together, it was based on this school that they thought, right, we've got him.
This is slam dunk.
We've got him that he had a sexual encounter with multiple underage girls.
But then, what happened was they interviewed the girls and you can read all of their testimonies.
Under oath, they admitted that they'd lied about their ages.
The focus shifted originally onto Sarah Kellen, one of his assistants, but she was found to have asked about their ages and said, make sure they're over 18 to Virginia and Haley Robson.
And then the focus shifted back onto Epstein, but his lawyers did a very good job.
Alan Dershowitz was one of them in pointing out the fact that, well, he's taken a lie detector test.
It's proven that there are mitigating factors.
He's not innocent.
He has broken the law, even if he didn't know he was breaking the law at the time.
It's irrelevant.
So he's soliciting sex, right?
I mean, if you, if you're paying soliciting for sex and these girls were getting cars, college tuition, I mean, they were getting that's illegal, right?
Okay, so, so, yeah, yeah, but so I mean, I don't definitely, I mean, that's okay.
So, Alan Dershowitz is a good lawyer is the explanation, basically.
Not that, not that there were mitigating factors in that, you know, this wasn't just a first they thought, right, we've got a paedophile here who has targeted young girls.
That is very easy to send him into prison for a long time.
Then, when they realized that actually, no, he didn't target young girls, he didn't say, you know, I want to find some under 18s.
When that was established, that's when there were mitigating factors.
And the crime, although serious still, it was enough to get him a reduced sentence and to sort of give his defense ammunition to get a lesser charge.
Was he what?
So, Ghelane Maxwell was his girlfriend at one point, and he sort of loved this about himself.
He was proud that he maintained relationships with his ex-girlfriends.
Ghillaine essentially is described as his madam.
Is that a proper description of her then?
No, not at all.
No, no.
See, I've interviewed most of the so-called victims in all of the elder, the women who were overage at the time that they met Jeffrey Epstein, went to the island, etc., had their cars and apartments paid for them, are documented as asking to go back to the island.
Every single one of them has told me that they didn't see Gillene do anything wrong.
And two of them have previously told the press that Gillen was part of this massive sex trafficking operation.
During her trial, they wrote in victim impact statements, Gillene destroyed my life, that she was the madam, she was running all of this.
And yet, when I've interviewed them after the fact, they've admitted to me, when one of them went crazy when she realized she'd slipped up, that she never once saw Gillene Maxwell recruit anyone, groom anyone, or abuse anyone.
Multiple Denials00:08:10
So the police, when Jeffrey Epstein died, not the police, sorry, the authorities, they were hugely humiliated and prosecutors, et cetera.
They had to get nail someone in her place, in his place.
They had to find someone else for the public to drag onto the pyre and burn as a witch and this massive witch hunt.
And they couldn't go after Virginia or the people who had actually recruited these girls.
They couldn't go after Sarah Kellen and some of his assistants who are proven to have arranged and organized the massages because they weren't big names and nobody knew who they were.
But here you had Ghillenne Maxwell, a famous name, a socialite, known practically around the world.
And she fit the bill, former, former girlfriend of his, and she was perfect.
If you look into the actual timeline, you'll see that Gillene is more or less a blip to some extent in Jeffrey Epstein's life.
And she was absent completely through a lot of the period, quite a large chunk of the period when some of these victims say that they were abused by Jeffrey Epstein.
She was in other relationships.
She broke contact briefly with Jeffrey.
And the evidence, so part of my evidence that I've found has been included in her habeas corpus, for instance.
Her trial was a complete travesty.
And that's a different, you could have a whole show just talking about.
Do you believe she was guilty?
Do you think she's guilty of some wrongdoing?
I originally honestly, and I get slated for this, but I originally went into this believing that everyone was telling the truth and that Ghillenne Maxwell must have been guilty and must have known.
But the evidence that I've unearthed, all the evidence that's already in existence and anyone can examine it, you know, the other stuff.
And people, if they went and read some of the stuff on my substack, they will see that I don't defend her.
I just say the evidence shows that she did not commit the crime.
She's not guilty.
Did she have an accuser?
Did she have a relationship with President Bill Clinton?
I think she's a very flirty person.
I think she's quite, you know, her family, if they were listening, wouldn't like me saying this, but I think she was quite sexually active and flirtatious.
But there's no evidence to say that she had a sexual relationship with Bill Clinton.
Didn't she reference his private areas?
Yeah, but she talked about that.
She mentioned that about many other people.
I think in some of the emails, she said, you're well hung.
You're hung like a bear and things like this, sort of jokey things.
We know that she was associated with Clinton, that she had a friendship with Clinton.
She went swimming with Clinton and things like this.
And they were at the same events together.
But there isn't actually any evidence.
One person did claim, but this person was Virginia.
So you have to take it with Pinchfelt that she had given oral sex to Bill Clinton.
But as I say, Virginia has been found to have lied about most of her allegations.
So you just don't know.
That's the thing about this.
There are certain things that I can prove one million centers and some that you can't.
So the final thing I'll ask you about is the Epstein's links to Putin and the Kremlin spies.
What do we know about this now from this latest email dump?
Yeah.
So his reference throughout Putin.
And I think now that is going to spawn a massive investigation into potential connections with the Kremlin.
We know that Jeffrey Epstein liked to have the control over people in the sense of manipulating politics, attacking Donald Trump.
He helped one of the Democrats.
He was texting her at the time and telling her how to grill a witness to go after Donald Trump.
So he was very keen on feeling powerful, being connected to powerful people.
And the documents clearly show that he was coveting a very close relationship with people high up in Russia.
And he had a fascination with Russia.
People don't mention this, but Jeffrey Epstein was Russia obsessed.
He was particularly obsessed with Russian women, young 18 to 20 year olds.
And that's because he loved the book Lolita.
That doesn't ring, you know, it's not very good in his defense.
But he was fascinated with that.
He was fascinated with Russian culture and politics.
And the documents that are being unearthed now, I'm going to be putting out a series about his Russia connections.
But they do show that there was his ties to Russia run far deeper than we thought.
Interesting.
So there is potentially, in your estimate, you and Blake are like the wet blankets of Epstein conspiracies.
So there is, but even you will admit that there is a thread to pull that still needs pulling when it comes to Russia.
Okay, fair enough.
I have to ask you because just, you know, it's another name that's being asked about.
Steve Bannon, what was Steve Bannon's connection to Jeffrey Epstein?
And is there any indication from the email and the new files that have been dumped that he did anything untoward, wrong, illegal?
Absolutely not.
So Steve Bannon, they're going after Steve Bannon because of his past connection with Trump.
Steve Bannon did nothing wrong.
There is no evidence whatsoever to show that he did anything wrong.
In fact, if you read through the Epstein files and all of the evidence that's come before this, you'll see that his part in all of this is very minor and that he wasn't as close to Jeffrey Epstein as anybody assumes.
So he did, after Jeffrey Epstein's conviction, Jeffrey Epstein was naturally a great person to interview.
That's a scoop to get to get hold of him.
Jeffrey Epstein at the same time wanted to exploit that because he wanted to reinvent his image and try and correct some of the negative publicity that was being naturally and understandably directed at him.
Steve Bannon approached him.
They were talking.
They'd already had a connection in the past, very brief association.
And then we're seeing now, you can go and watch the interview that Steve Bannon conducted.
And that was Steve Bannon does not hold any punches back.
He does, it's a fascinating interview, but he does say, you know, you're a convicted sex offender.
He gets Jeffrey Epstein a bit uncomfortable.
But as far as any guilt, it goes back to that guilt by association again.
You are photographed here or you're documented as having an association with a guy who turned out to be a criminal.
Ergo, you must be a criminal.
Well, that's completely nonsense.
You know, it's complete nonsense.
And there is no evidence to show that Bannon ever did anything wrong.
Yeah.
And that's, I've, I think that's a fair assumption.
I've always been told that it was sort of like post Bannon being in Trump world.
He went to go interview and wanted a scoop, wanted a documentary.
You know, it seems like it, you know, checks the smell tests, but we'll see as well.
We have to remember as well.
We have to remember that Epstein was very keen to go after Donald Trump.
They'd had this fallout.
You can read the emails where he's really criticizing Donald Trump.
He helped actively, the House Democrats try to smear Donald Trump.
Now, if Epstein, that goes to another point we were talking about earlier.
If Epstein had any information that was damaging against Donald Trump, he would have released it.
He didn't have any.
He didn't have anything against Donald Trump to release.
He was trying to find other ways, desperately scraping the barrel, just like the lawyers and the journalists are doing now, to attack Donald Trump.
But he didn't have anything damaging.
Well, and I've also heard the theory floated that Steve was also doing some counterintelligence to see if there was what the attack vectors could be.
Thank You, Jay00:01:45
I haven't spoken with him about it.
I've been doing video.
So that's another theory.
Jay Beecher, please let everybody know how they can follow you, how they can follow along in your upcoming book.
Yeah, sure.
So if you head over to my sub stack, I think it's at JayBeecher or go to the rebeljournalist.com and you can subscribe to me there.
It's riddled with exclusive interviews with most of the key players, with Donald Trump's lawyer, with the Maxwell family, with the accused and the accusers.
And my book, Naked Lies, is going to be covering my six-year investigation.
And there are some really, there's some evidence that I've had to hold back for the book.
So there's some really explosive things that when the book comes out, it's going to, there's going to be a mini earthquake, I think, in this.
It'll make some headlines and change some minds as well.
So it should be coming out at the end of this month, at the very latest at the first week of next month.
But it's looking to be the end of this month.
Well, congratulations on the book.
That's always a huge undertaking.
So Jay, thank you for your time.
Thank you for, you know, I'm sure the emails are going to be very upset at us, but that's, I'm sure, doesn't matter.
We're asking you the questions you're giving your POV.
It is what you're doing.
Just direct the hate to me.
Don't worry.
Just say, you know, don't shoot the messages.
Listen, one of them says you're full of poop emoji, but yeah, you know, I don't care.
We get a few of those every day.
All right.
Jay Beecher, thank you so much for your time.
Looking forward to Naked Lies coming out at the end of this month, early at the latest, early next month.
Thank you for your perspective and all of that hard work that you've done.