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class according to Kia segmentation as of October 2025. What's up everyone and welcome back to
the program. Down at Mar-a-Lago, Donald Trump has had his house raided by the federal bureau of
investigations. And as you can imagine, old Trumpster wasn't too happy about what occurred.
Today though, we're not going to talk about that raid. What we're going to talk about is the judge
who signed off on it. And the judge who signed off on it is a man. Well, he's a man that those
of you who follow the Epstein case should know of. And his name is Bruce Reinhardt. That's right,
the guy who once quit his job as a US attorney to work for Jeffrey Epstein. He's the guy who just
signed off on this warrant. And for me, it just shows you why there was never a rico case
brought in the first place. This guy Bruce Reinhardt quit the federal government when on live
TV defended Jeffrey Epstein not as a lawyer, but just as a legal analyst. And now he has a job as
a judge where he's able to sign off on warrants such as this. How come he doesn't sign off on a
warrant for Zorro Ranch to get rated? Where's the warrant for the rest of Epstein's homies to get
rated? And then you wonder why people get fired up. There is no way on God's green earth that
anybody who is working for Jeffrey Epstein in any capacity should ever be a judge.
Today we have an article from lawsinflorta.com and the headline. Epstein's little black book of
princes, law professors, and now this prosecutor. This article was published by laws in Florida and
the author is laws in Florida staff. The US magistrate overseeing the legal battle between Craig Wright
and the estate of Dave Cleaman over who owns a $10 billion bitcoin fortune and Bitcoins underlying
IP is not without controversy of his own. Bruce Reinhardt once quit his job as a US attorney to work
for Jeffrey Epstein, the multi-millionaire accused sex trafficker who was being targeted in a
pro by the US attorney's office. As reported in the Miami Herald on November 28, 2018, Epstein also
hired Bruce Reinhardt then an assistant US attorney in South Florida and now a US magistrate.
Now why would Epstein have to hire all of these ex prosecutors? Why did he have to bring on all of
these ex-government employees? Was he bringing them on because of their grand expertise or was he
bringing them on for their connections? Because they're part of the club. You know the club you're
not allowed in? The club you're not welcome to? That's where this guy Bruce Reinhardt makes his
living and it is absurd that a man like this should ever even be a judge. He left his US attorney's
office on January 1, 2008 and went to work representing Epstein's employees on January 2, 2008.
Court record show. So he quits on January 1 of 2008, right? And then the next day he is working
as a lawyer defending Jeffrey Epstein's employees. Why is this guy a judge?
In 2011, Reinhardt was named in the Crime Victims Rights Act lawsuit which accused him of violating
Justice Department policies by switching sides, implying that he leveraged inside information
about Epstein's investigation to curry favor with Epstein. So what they're saying is he used
his inside knowledge of the case as a prosecutor to help Jeffrey Epstein beat these charges.
It's the same thing I've said from the beginning. This was all manipulated and not in a courtroom.
This was manipulated behind the scenes at bars in restaurants where these high power lawyers would
meet up with people in the government and they'd work out these deals. And that's how it always
works. If you're one of Epstein's homies, you'll never get your padrated. You can guarantee that
because it'll tie all these other people to you and they can't have it. And that's why we don't
have a Rico case. If anyone needed any more reason why this wasn't a Rico case, if it wasn't apparent
before, it should be very apparent right now. If they went the Rico route, all of these people
would have been caught up in it. And it would have been, though, the biggest controversy,
the biggest shit sandwich the American government has ever eaten.
Also reported in the Miami Herald, Reinhardt made plans that would establish his private practice
while still in office. On October 23rd, 2007, a federal prosecutor in South Florida were in the
midst of tense negotiations to finalize a plea deal with accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein,
a senior prosecutor in their office, was quietly laying out plans to leave the US attorney's office
after 11 years. Boy, you sure had that nice fall down for you, huh? Nice golden parachute to jump
out of the building with. Leave the prosecutor's office where you're probably making peanuts and go
directly to work for Jeffrey Epstein, huh? Sounds like a fantastic idea.
On that date, as emails were flying between Epstein's lawyers and federal prosecutors,
Bruce E. Reinhardt, now a federal magistrate, opened a limited liability company in Florida that
established what would become his new criminal defense practice. So while he was on the dime,
taking taxpayer dollars and being entrusted to go after people like Epstein, instead,
the honorable Bruce Reinhardt had a whole different idea going on,
setting himself up for a little bit of dosky to secure that bag, right? Ah, you know what? We're
just we're prosecuting Epstein. Maybe if I leave and go and work for Epstein, that'll be more
profitable. In 2011, affidavit Reinhardt swore under a penalty of perjury that he was not part of the
team involved in Epstein's investigation. And therefore, it was not privy to any confidential
information about the case while he was at the US attorney's office. So you want us to believe
that your boys didn't ever hit you to what was going on to the case. You didn't ever talk to any
of your colleagues about what's going on in the Jeffrey Epstein case. Okay, sure, we believe you
missed a Reinhardt. However, as the Miami Herald points out, Reinhardt's former supervisors in the US
attorney's office filed a court paper contradicting him saying that while Bruce Reinhardt was an
assistant US attorney, he learned confidential non-public information about the Epstein matter.
Can I ask you, folks, again, how anyone can cheer on a guy like this? How anyone can think that
this is someone that we can trust with justice? In one of the 2011 Epstein cases,
Jane Doe's number one and number two United States Reinhardt took offense at the idea that he
did anything wrong. In that motion, the plaintiff alleged that Reinhardt joined Epstein's
payroll shortly after important decisions were made limiting Epstein's criminal liability and,
improperly, represented Epstein's survivors in follow-on civil suits. Plaintiffs contend that such
conduct gives, at least the improper appearance that Reinhardt may have attempted to curry favor
with Epstein and then reap his reward through favorable employment. And this is a guy who is a judge
making these impactful decisions for us. And now throw out Mar-a-Lago, I don't even care about
Trump. Ray Trump's house, all you want. You know, if you have the goods and you have enough
to get the warrant and grade, my point for this episode is why is a guy like Judge Reinhardt
even involved in it at all? How is it that he still has a job? How is it that he was made a judge
when everybody knows this information? And you tell me the system isn't broken. You tell me it is
set up for people like us to fail. Reinhardt takes great offense to these actions, accusations,
which he contends are false or relevant to the CVR claims and gratuitous and seeks intervention
to rebut these allegations and move for sanction. These are the survivors by the way saying this,
the plaintiffs who called Reinhardt out. In 2012, he went to work for the white collar crime
division of McDonald Hopkins LLC in Miami. At the time, a public relations firm put out a press release
stating, since 2008, Reinhardt has been in private practice providing white collar and complex
civil litigation, strategies for a variety of businesses, executives, and non-profit entities
around the country. As Julie K. Brown of the Miami Herald put it, Reinhardt's defection was one of
many highly unusual turns that the Epstein case took 12 years ago. Moves that could merit examination
as the multi-millionaire's controversial non-prosecution agreement is dissected in the wake of his
arrest last week on sex trafficking charges. Now, again, if you just look at Epstein dying in custody
by on its own, you could say, all right, I get it, dude was depressed, you do want to be in prison
for every killed himself. But when you look at all of this other stuff, all of these other quote-on-quote
coincidences and other situations that just happened to pop up along the way, it's hard for me to
just sit here and say, oh, this is all coincidence. How can anyone believe that what happened down here
in Florida, especially, was on the up and up and that Epstein wasn't manipulating everything from
behind the scenes. And if you believe that, how can you possibly cheer the FBI on ever?
I don't trust the FBI, I don't trust their motivations, and I believe that they're politicized.
So how can I trust them? And I don't pick and choose when I trust the government folks,
people that do that, you know what they're called? They're called hypocrites. And your bias is
showing when you're doing that. Me, I rage against the FBI, no matter who's in office, because I
find their behavior to be absolutely beyond the pale. And the fact that these people never face
consequences, meaning the FBI agents or prosecutors involved in things like this, the fact that they
never face consequences really launches me into orbit. How many more cases do we need to discuss?
See, I don't just pick and choose if I'm going to cheer the FBI on. Chances are, I am not cheering
them on, okay? Because I don't trust that they're going to do things correctly. And that's on them,
that's not on me, that's because of the way they conduct themselves.
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President Barack Obama. Virginia, we are counting on you. Republicans want to steal enough
seats in Congress to raid the next election and wield unchecked power for two more years.
But you can stop them by voting yes by April 21st. Help put our elections back on a level
playing field and let voters decide not politicians. Vote yes by April 21st.
In 2015, Reinhardt defended Epstein on TV not as his attorney of seven years,
but as a legal expert and a former US prosecutor isn't that nice. Let me just hop on TV and defend
Jeffrey Epstein and then let me go ahead and get a job as a judge because you know why not.
Reinhardt was appointed US magistrate in March 2018, nearly a year after Alexander Acosta began
his stint as labor secretary. Acosta resigned on July 19th, 2019, over his handling of the Epstein case.
At the time, Reinhardt is recorded in the Palm Beach Post is saying,
it's been a good week in our house. Yeah, you know who it has been a good week for, a good year for,
a good decade for the survivors, judge Reinhardt. And it's because of people like you that refuse
to really pursue justice that things like this are happening. That was odd because the next
sentence is about a guilty verdict for a client. He recently represented former Boynton Beach
police officer Michael Brown. The veteran cop last month was sentenced to six months house arrest
in three years of probation. The son's sentinel headline on the story on November 10th,
2017 was Boynton Beach cop found guilty in beating of unarmed man. So this guy's out here talking
about, oh, it's been a good week in our house as he just loses the case. But the real thing that
gets me here, folks, is why is this guy in the position of being a judge in the first place?
Anyone who's linked to Epstein, especially in a matter of such as this, should not be a judge,
should Alan Dershowitz be a judge? Should J. Lefkowitz be a judge? Should a star can star be a judge?
No, of course not. And neither should Mr. Bruce Reinhardt.
If you'd like to contact me, you can do that at Bobby Kapuchi at proton mail.com. That's B-O-B-B-Y-C-A-P-U-C-C-C-I
at proton mail.com. If you'd like to find me on Twitter, you can do that as well at B-O-B-B-Y underscore
C-A-P-U-C-C-I. The link that we discussed can be found in the description box. All right,
everybody, I'll be back later on with a little bit more. Hope that all of you are having a good one.
Folks, we're going to jump into our article today. And this article has to do with the government
finally apologizing to Epstein's victims. But at the same time, defending the immunity deal
that it tossed out, that it gave out to Epstein and the co-conspirators. So this is an article
from the courthouse news. And the author is Izzy Kappnick. The article was published on January 16th.
In the eleventh circuit, government prosecutors at long last uttered the word sorry
in open court to victims of Jeffrey Epstein's underage sex ring. After years of refusing to
apologize for keeping them in the dark about a deal that protected the wealthy money manager,
pedophile from federal charges. Well, isn't that nice? The government is just so great,
they finally decided to say sorry. For throwing these girls under the bus, boy, isn't that awesome.
The government, you know, there really are a bunch of great people over there
in the federal prosecutor's office, aren't there? Just a bunch of just incredibly awesome people.
The apology was issued during a Thursday morning, a pellet proceeding in Miami,
attended by Courtney Wilde, who says Epstein sexually abused her at his mansion when she was
14 years old. Again, folks, every time I read stuff like this, 14 years old, 13 years old,
11 years old, it makes me so sad. Imagine, because I remember being that age, I remember being
that age. I remember how the world was, you know, I was going to be a professional football player,
you know, the whole world was mine to take. And I can't even imagine the rug being pulled out from
under me by some sick, demented pervert the way her whole world was shook up. I mean, are you kidding
me right now? She and her lawyers were in court to challenge a federal judge's decision to preserve
the 2007 deal, which gave Epstein and his assistance immunity from federal sex crime charges in South
Florida. The government should have communicated to Miss Wilde in a straightforward way. We are
genuinely sorry, assistant US attorney Jill Steinberg said, apologizing for her predecessor's
mistreatment of victims. We're, well, you know, since they're genuinely sorry, we could all move
on now, folks, you know, they're genuinely sorry. So it's okay. No, it's not okay. And take
your sorry and shove it. We want movement in the case, all right? We want everybody involved
that got that that plush plea deal, the immunity, because of Jeffrey Epstein, we want that throne
in the trash, and we want all of them to face the music. Wilde's longtime lawyer Bradley Edwards
said outside the courthouse that while Wilde welcomes the government repentance, she wants more
concrete relief. Siting the government's admitted violations of the Crime Victims Rights Act,
Edwards said that clear that the clear remedy is to rescind the non-prosecution agreement,
hallelujah, that is obviously what should happen, all right? It was not granted in good faith,
okay? The process of the prosecution agreement was not granted in good faith and it needs to be
overturned and everybody named in those documents and everybody named as a co-conspirator needs to have
a very speedy trial and then harsh punishment. The government told the appellate panel that the
Crime Victims Rights Act provides a means for disenfranchised victims to challenge plea bargains,
not non-prosecution agreements like Epstein's. Steinberg claimed that because federal prosecutors
never filed a formal charging document, the act's rescission remedies do not apply. Look, it's
such legalese, right? They're using loopholes. The government is using loopholes so that they don't
have to do their job. Again, fire them all and bring in new people. I've had enough. Honestly,
folks, I've had enough with all of these institutions, all of these federal government institutions,
all of these supposed law offices and places where, you know, the Justice Department, the FBI,
I don't have any faith in any of them. Sorry. Edward said after the hearing that the government
stance amounts to using a legal loophole to sidestep victims, right? That's exactly what I just said.
It's definitely a loophole. It's definitely a legal loophole. These guys, they know the law inside
and out. They wrote the laws, basically, so they know how to skirt to the side when they don't want
to prosecute. This is an argument the government has been making for some time. They're saying
we never formally indicted, so we didn't have to treat the victims with dignity, Edward said. Well,
they didn't do that. They didn't treat the victims with any dignity at all, and they still aren't
treating them with dignity to this day. And it's offensive to see. It's just offensive to see the way
the government is still treating these victims of Jeffrey Epstein and his pals. Epstein, who rub
shoulders with the richest of the rich and the Palm Beach social scene, members of the British
royal family and President Donald Trump and Bill Clinton died in August 2019 while in custody
on New Sex Crime charges filed in New York. His death was deemed a suicide by a New York City
medical examiner, though a forensic pathologist hired by his brother argued that his injuries
suggested homicide. And we talked about that yesterday, the burst capillaries. I'm not going to
rehash all of that stuff. We all know where we're at there. But come on, Epstein killed himself on.
Okay. In the old Florida criminal case, Epstein was accused of learning more than 30 underage
girls to his Palm Beach mansion and coercing them into sexual activity in a massage room that
his aides allegedly helped him set up and maintain. He cut the 2007 deal with the Southern District
of Florida's prosecutors under which he pleaded guilty to a state charge of soliciting underage
prostitution in exchange for assurances that he would not be federally charged. Every time I
read that, it makes me mad to underage prostitution. What? It's not even a thing. If you're underage,
how can you consent? How can you be a prostitute if you're underage? Just another way to try and
sell these girls. Epstein served roughly a year in prison. He was allowed to leave his cell and
spend daytime in an office under a work release program. In February 2019, 11 years deep into
Guiles lawsuit against the government, US District Judge Kenneth Mara, a George W Bush,
a George W Bush appointee, found that federal prosecutors violated the Crime Victims Rights Act by
concealing Epstein's deal from victims as plea negotiations played out and even after the deal
was signed. That right there is enough to bring these prosecutors in and charge them, in my opinion,
talk about a dereliction of duty. You're going to go after Tova Noel and the other guard, I forget
his name, Michael Thomas. I believe you have Michael Thomas and Tova Noel because they fell
asleep on the job, but the whole entire government violated the Crime Victims Rights Act and no big deal,
right? Nobody gets punished. We'll just move on. Must be nice to make the law.
Must be nice to not to have to follow the law, too. Last September, Mara granted virtually no
relief to Wilde and the other plaintiff, however. He found that their demand to nullify Epstein's
immunity in Florida was made moot when Epstein died. Boy, isn't that convenient? Boy, isn't that
convenient for Judge Mara? A George W. Bush appointee. Interesting. I wonder how many rounds of
golf Mara has played with Epstein's people. As for the assistant who allegedly helped Epstein
lure underage girls to the Palm Beach mansion, Judge Mara found that the court couldn't
void their immunity because there were never parties to Wilde's litigation. Again, more legalese,
more loopholes. Basically, what he's saying is, you have no recourse. You're screwed. Basically,
what the judge is saying. Wilde's attorneys argued Thursday that if the co-conspirators needed to
be brought into the litigation for Judge Mara to grant relief, then the judge could have and
should have ordered a jointer. Case law establishes that if a jointer problem arises in granting relief,
the proper response is not to terminate the case, but rather to direct that any necessary missing
parties be joined. Lawyer Paul Kassel argued. In any event, Kassel claimed the co-conspirators were
nothing more than indirect beneficiaries of the Epstein non-prosecution agreement. Judge Mara's
findings that they need to be brought into the litigation was consequently untenable, Castle said.
The deal, which was not signed by the alleged cohort reads, oh wow, that's crazy. So it was not
signed by the people that are being protected by it. How is it a binding document? If you were
right, don't sign something. There's no way that it's going to be a binding document. But all of
a sudden, because it involves Jeffrey Epstein and his circle of witches, that's all good. Don't
even worry about it. You got to write it on a napkin. We'll write out our contract on a napkin. No big deal.
What does this even mean?
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The United States agrees that it will not institute any criminal charges against any potential
co-conspirators of Epstein. And let's look at that, folks. Are you kidding me with that huge,
wide spread immunity deal there of any co-conspirators of Epstein? Oh, I wonder why Alan Dershowitz would
have it written that way, huh? I wonder if Alan Dershowitz is one of those co-conspirators that
is protected. Makes you think, folks. The agreement mentions Epstein's assistance, Sarah Kellen,
Nadia Marcincova, and Leslie Groff by name. Okay, all three of them, right? Plus,
Gilein Maxwell, all need to be arrested, all need to be slapped with Rico charges,
and all need to be put under a federal prison for the rest of their lives.
The government maintains that the victim's attorneys, not the court itself, were responsible
for initiating an action to bring the alleged conspirators into the litigation. The Department of
Justice, how about we call it the Department of Injustice from here on out, is also claiming that
victims' rights under the CVRA were vindicated when they spoke their piece at a New York criminal
proceeding last year. Wow, are you kidding me right now? Because they had their chance to have
their say that it's all good. The CVRA was vindicated, wrong, wrong. An investigation by New
York prosecutors may still yield charges against Epstein's alleged cohorts, Steinberg said.
The appellate panel balked at that reasoning. How does the New York proceeding have any
bearing on whether the Southern District made a mistake in this case? As senior U.S. Circuit
Judge Gerald Bard Toflat, a Gerald Ford appointee, a Gerald Ford appointee. Come on, man. Time to retire,
a Judge Gerald Bard Toflat. Time for you to retire, pack it in, get your nice 10 gallon hat,
your cowboy boots, and head to Florida. Oh wait, you're in Florida already. Time to retire, sir.
The government's argument about potential infringements on prosecutorial discretion gain more
traction among the panel. Judge Toflat was concerned that if the Crime Victims Rights Act is
interpreted too broadly, it could be a slippery slope as far as judicial interference with prosecutors
day-to-day decisions on whether to prosecute a suspect. The Judge referenced the old refrain,
once the camel gets his nose in the tent, his body will soon follow. Okay, boomer.
Castle tried to delay the panel's concerns in an exchange that at times grew terse. He said
that his client is asking for a narrow decision on violations of victims' rights in the end stage
of plea negotiations, a ruling that would not pose an existential threat to prosecutors' executive
powers. Also on appeal is Judge Mara's denial of wilds' request for various documents from
the criminal case, including grand jury records and deliberations within the Department of Justice
regarding the decision not to prosecute Epstein. Though the Department of Justice admitted to
Judge Mara in 2019 that it failed to confer with the victims about the non-prosecution agreement,
it stopped short of issuing an apology to Wild at that time. Until this morning, the Department
had taken the position that saying, sorry, was not a good remedy. Folks, folks, here we are,
all the way from where we were at to where we are now, and these girls are still being screwed
around by the courts. You would think that the courts would want to unseal this stuff and they
would want to get this case, you know, to see the light of day. But more roadblocks and more hurdles.
So let's just hope that, you know, Bradley Edwards and the lawyer team for these girls
continues to fight the good fight and eventually these judges see the light. So all right, folks,
again, frustrating. It's frustrating to read stuff like this. It's frustrating to read.
That this stuff was even done in the first place. This should have, this shouldn't even be a thing.
We shouldn't even be here. All of these people should have been prosecuted and they should all
be in prison. But instead, these girls are forced to wake up every single day and continue the fight
that they've been waging since, some of them since they've been 14, 13, 11 years old,
and the court and the prosecutors and law enforcement and the media, nobody has been anywhere
to be found. These girls have been left on an island pretty much to defend themselves and to try
and get to the bottom of this. Well, not anymore. We're all here standing shoulder to shoulder with
the victims at this point. And we won't stop until we have justice. And I hope that they understand
that. And, you know, one or two nets, no big deal. 10 million nets. Well, now you can't breathe.
And that's the plan, folks. We're going to smother them. We're going to keep up the pressure
until they're forced to do the right thing. All right, folks, if you'd like to contact me,
you could do that at Bobby Capucci at ProtonMail.com. That's B-O-B-B-Y-C-A-P-U-C-C-I
at ProtonMail.com. Or you can contact me on Twitter. That's B-O-B-B-Y-U-S-C-A-P-U-C-C-E-I.
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The Diddy Diaries

The Diddy Diaries

The Diddy Diaries