Beyond The Horizon

Bobby Capucci

Beyond the Horizon is a project that aims to dig a bit deeper than just the surface level that we are so used to with the legacy media while at the same time attempting to side step the gaslighting and rhetoric in search of the truth. From the day to day news that dominates the headlines to more complex geopolitical issues that effect all of our lives, we will be exploring them all. It's time to stop settling for what is force fed to us and it's time to look beyond the horizon.

  1. 5H AGO

    Inside the OIG Interview: Tova Noel’s Account of the Morning Jeffrey Epstein Died (Part 12) (3/15/26)

    During the Office of Inspector General investigation into the death of Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019, correctional officer Tova Noel gave an interview describing how the morning unfolded when Epstein was discovered in his cell. According to her account, she and fellow officer Michael Thomas were assigned to monitor the Special Housing Unit overnight. Noel told investigators that when breakfast rounds began that morning, Thomas approached Epstein’s cell and noticed something was wrong. She said Thomas called out for assistance and that she moved toward the area, where Epstein was found hanging from a strip of bedding tied to the top bunk. Noel stated that Thomas entered the cell first and attempted to cut the ligature while she retrieved equipment to assist, after which they lowered Epstein to the floor so CPR could begin. However, the OIG investigation was highly critical of Noel’s conduct and the credibility of the circumstances she described. Investigators determined that Noel and Thomas had failed to perform the legally required inmate counts and physical security checks for hours during the night Epstein died, leaving him unmonitored in a high-risk suicide watch environment. The report also found that Noel later signed official count sheets falsely indicating that the checks had been completed, despite evidence showing they had not been. Surveillance records and other evidence suggested the officers spent large portions of the shift away from their assigned duties, and investigators concluded that their negligence created the conditions that allowed Epstein to remain unattended long enough to die. As a result, Noel’s interview with OIG was viewed less as a clear explanation of events and more as part of a broader record showing severe procedural failures and falsified documentation at the very time Epstein required the highest level of supervision. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00117759.pdf

    13 min
  2. 7H AGO

    Inside the OIG Interview: Tova Noel’s Account of the Morning Jeffrey Epstein Died (Part 11) (3/15/26)

    During the Office of Inspector General investigation into the death of Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019, correctional officer Tova Noel gave an interview describing how the morning unfolded when Epstein was discovered in his cell. According to her account, she and fellow officer Michael Thomas were assigned to monitor the Special Housing Unit overnight. Noel told investigators that when breakfast rounds began that morning, Thomas approached Epstein’s cell and noticed something was wrong. She said Thomas called out for assistance and that she moved toward the area, where Epstein was found hanging from a strip of bedding tied to the top bunk. Noel stated that Thomas entered the cell first and attempted to cut the ligature while she retrieved equipment to assist, after which they lowered Epstein to the floor so CPR could begin. However, the OIG investigation was highly critical of Noel’s conduct and the credibility of the circumstances she described. Investigators determined that Noel and Thomas had failed to perform the legally required inmate counts and physical security checks for hours during the night Epstein died, leaving him unmonitored in a high-risk suicide watch environment. The report also found that Noel later signed official count sheets falsely indicating that the checks had been completed, despite evidence showing they had not been. Surveillance records and other evidence suggested the officers spent large portions of the shift away from their assigned duties, and investigators concluded that their negligence created the conditions that allowed Epstein to remain unattended long enough to die. As a result, Noel’s interview with OIG was viewed less as a clear explanation of events and more as part of a broader record showing severe procedural failures and falsified documentation at the very time Epstein required the highest level of supervision. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00117759.pdf

    14 min
  3. 9H AGO

    Inside the OIG Interview: Tova Noel’s Account of the Morning Jeffrey Epstein Died (Part 10) (3/15/26)

    During the Office of Inspector General investigation into the death of Jeffrey Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in August 2019, correctional officer Tova Noel gave an interview describing how the morning unfolded when Epstein was discovered in his cell. According to her account, she and fellow officer Michael Thomas were assigned to monitor the Special Housing Unit overnight. Noel told investigators that when breakfast rounds began that morning, Thomas approached Epstein’s cell and noticed something was wrong. She said Thomas called out for assistance and that she moved toward the area, where Epstein was found hanging from a strip of bedding tied to the top bunk. Noel stated that Thomas entered the cell first and attempted to cut the ligature while she retrieved equipment to assist, after which they lowered Epstein to the floor so CPR could begin. However, the OIG investigation was highly critical of Noel’s conduct and the credibility of the circumstances she described. Investigators determined that Noel and Thomas had failed to perform the legally required inmate counts and physical security checks for hours during the night Epstein died, leaving him unmonitored in a high-risk suicide watch environment. The report also found that Noel later signed official count sheets falsely indicating that the checks had been completed, despite evidence showing they had not been. Surveillance records and other evidence suggested the officers spent large portions of the shift away from their assigned duties, and investigators concluded that their negligence created the conditions that allowed Epstein to remain unattended long enough to die. As a result, Noel’s interview with OIG was viewed less as a clear explanation of events and more as part of a broader record showing severe procedural failures and falsified documentation at the very time Epstein required the highest level of supervision. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source: EFTA00117759.pdf

    14 min
  4. 11H AGO

    Mega Edition: Ghislaine Maxwell Pleads Not Guilty To All The Charges Filed Against Her (3/15/26)

    Ghislaine Maxwell entered pleas of not guilty to all charges brought against her, asserting that she had no involvement in the sexual abuse and trafficking of minors connected to Jeffrey Epstein. During her arraignments, Maxwell’s defense team argued that the prosecution was attempting to make her a scapegoat for Epstein’s crimes following his death in federal custody, claiming she was being unfairly targeted because Epstein was no longer alive to stand trial. They maintained that Maxwell had no knowledge of or participation in any abuse and that the accusations were based on unreliable memories and media-driven pressure rather than hard evidence. Despite the severity of the charges, Maxwell continued to insist on her innocence throughout the pre-trial process, challenging both the credibility of the accusers and the conditions of her confinement. Her attorneys attempted multiple times to secure bail, claiming she was being held under excessively harsh conditions and was not a flight risk, but the court repeatedly rejected these requests due to concerns about her financial resources, international ties, and the possibility she could flee prosecution. Throughout her legal battle, Maxwell’s not-guilty stance became central to her defense narrative, framing the case as one of political and public scapegoating rather than criminal accountability. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

    55 min
  5. 13H AGO

    Mega Edition: The Corruption That Has Plagued The Epstein Investigation Since Day 1 (3/15/26)

    The Jeffrey Epstein investigation has been defined by a decades-long trail of corruption, influence, and protection that spans both political parties and powerful institutions. From the very beginning, Epstein’s connections to elite figures—from Wall Street moguls and intelligence officials to presidents and royals—seemed to grant him immunity from normal legal consequences. The 2008 non-prosecution agreement in Florida, brokered in secret by federal prosecutors under Alex Acosta, remains one of the clearest examples of systemic rot: a sweetheart deal negotiated behind closed doors that shielded Epstein’s co-conspirators and effectively nullified justice for dozens of victims. Even as federal agents collected evidence of trafficking and witness tampering, the powerful leaned on their connections to ensure the case was quietly buried. When Epstein was re-arrested in 2019, that same machinery of protection reappeared—just more desperate and more visible. His suspicious “suicide” inside one of the most secure jails in the country occurred amid camera failures, sleeping guards, and missing logs, all while key financial and political figures scrambled to distance themselves. Every step since—sealed records, vanishing evidence, selective prosecutions, and lenient treatment of Ghislaine Maxwell—has reeked of containment rather than accountability. What began as a criminal case against one man has become a case study in institutional corruption, where the truth about Epstein’s network of power remains locked behind the same walls that failed to keep him alive. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

    54 min
  6. 15H AGO

    Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And The 'Original Sin' (3/15/26)

    Jeffrey Epstein’s 2007–2008 non-prosecution agreement was the original sin that corrupted every phase of accountability that followed, transforming a prosecutable sex-trafficking case into a blueprint for impunity. The agreement, secretly negotiated between Epstein’s legal team and federal prosecutors in South Florida, halted federal charges in exchange for a state plea that amounted to a work-release arrangement masquerading as punishment. By shielding Epstein and unnamed “co-conspirators” from federal prosecution, the NPA did more than go easy on one defendant; it rewrote the rules of justice in Epstein’s favor. Victims were excluded from the process entirely, denied their statutory rights under the Crime Victims’ Rights Act, while Epstein retained his wealth, mobility, social access, and power. The message to institutions, banks, politicians, and enablers was unmistakable: Epstein was protected, and consequences were negotiable. That protection radiated outward for more than a decade. The NPA discouraged future investigations, chilled prosecutorial appetite, and provided a ready-made excuse for inaction whenever new allegations surfaced. Law enforcement agencies treated Epstein as a resolved problem rather than an ongoing threat, while banks, universities, and elites pointed to the plea deal as proof that the system had already dealt with him. When Epstein was finally arrested again in 2019, the damage was irreversible: evidence was stale, victims had aged into silence, and the man at the center of the case had spent years refining his network under the cover of legal legitimacy. The NPA did not merely fail to stop Epstein’s crimes; it actively enabled their continuation by laundering his criminality through the appearance of justice, making his eventual death in custody the final, catastrophic consequence of a deal that should never have existed. to contact me: bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

    45 min
4
out of 5
254 Ratings

About

Beyond the Horizon is a project that aims to dig a bit deeper than just the surface level that we are so used to with the legacy media while at the same time attempting to side step the gaslighting and rhetoric in search of the truth. From the day to day news that dominates the headlines to more complex geopolitical issues that effect all of our lives, we will be exploring them all. It's time to stop settling for what is force fed to us and it's time to look beyond the horizon.

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