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Beyond The Horizon

Beyond The Horizon

By: Bobby Capucci
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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.Copyright Bobby Capucci
Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Mega Edition: Julie K. Brown Puts The USVI On Blast Over Their Epstein Hypocrisy (4/22/26)
    Apr 24 2026
    Julie K. Brown, the investigative reporter for the Miami Herald, not only reignited the Jeffrey Epstein case by exposing the sweetheart non-prosecution agreement in Florida but also turned her spotlight to Epstein’s Caribbean operations. In a 2023 Miami Herald piece titled “U.S. Virgin Islands cozied up to Jeffrey Epstein. Now they’re profiting from his sex crimes,” Brown detailed how Epstein benefited from deep ties to the territory’s institutions—securing lavish tax breaks and beneficial financial dealings through shell companies like Southern Trust. Her reporting underscored how USVI authorities, including those in positions of power, either overlooked or enabled Epstein’s operations, which later came under legal scrutiny through lawsuits and settlements.

    In the piece, Brown argued that the USVI not only allowed Epstein to operate with little interference but later positioned itself to collect financial benefits through penalties and settlements after his death. This framing suggested that the government was both complicit in allowing the criminal enterprise to flourish and opportunistic in profiting from its collapse. The article sparked strong pushback, including from the University of the Virgin Islands, which issued a public response disputing some of the claims. The controversy reflected the tension between investigative reporting that sought to highlight systemic failures and local institutions that rejected the characterization of their role.


    to contact me:

    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    source:

    U.S. Virgin Islands profiting from Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes | Miami Herald
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    50 mins
  • Mega Edition: Jeffrey Epstein And Many Ignored Violations Of His Probation And Work Release (4/23/26
    Apr 24 2026
    Witness accounts and newly surfaced files describe a pattern in which Jeffrey Epstein repeatedly violated the terms of his post-plea probation and work-release privileges—leaving authorized locations, extending his time outside custody, and interacting with individuals in ways that appeared to contradict the strict limitations he was supposed to be under. These weren’t isolated slip-ups; they were described as frequent and, at times, blatant departures from the rules that governed his sentence. Yet despite the volume and consistency of those reported violations, enforcement appeared minimal, creating the impression that the structure meant to monitor and restrict him was either inadequately applied or deliberately loosened in practice.

    What makes that pattern more controversial is how it intersects with the continued existence of Epstein’s non-prosecution agreement (NPA). Critics argue that repeated violations of the conditions surrounding his sentence should have triggered a serious reassessment—if not the outright collapse—of the agreement itself. Instead, the deal remained intact, and no decisive federal action was taken to revisit or revoke it, reinforcing the perception that Epstein was operating under a different standard of accountability. The result is an enduring question at the center of the case: why documented noncompliance didn’t lead to the unraveling of the agreement that shielded him, and why the institutions responsible for enforcing those terms appeared unwilling to act even as the violations accumulated.


    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
    Show more Show less
    50 mins
  • Mega Edition: The DOJ, The Epstein Video And the Missing Minute (4/23/26)
    Apr 24 2026
    The Justice Department’s release of surveillance footage from the night of Jeffrey Epstein’s death was supposed to settle lingering doubts—but instead, it reignited them. What immediately stood out was a gap in the footage: roughly a minute was missing from a critical stretch of time, with no clear or convincing explanation offered alongside the release. Given the already documented failures inside the facility—malfunctioning cameras, inattentive guards, and broken protocols—the missing segment didn’t come across as a minor technical issue. It landed as yet another inconsistency in a case already riddled with them, raising fresh questions about what exactly was captured during that window and why it wasn’t included.

    Rather than closing the door on speculation, the incomplete video fueled it. Critics pointed to the gap as emblematic of a broader pattern—piecemeal disclosures, unexplained lapses, and a steady drip of information that never quite adds up to a full picture. The DOJ’s inability or unwillingness to clearly account for the missing minute only deepened suspicions that key details were being withheld, whether intentionally or through systemic failure. In a case where public trust was already fragile, the release didn’t provide clarity—it reinforced the perception that even the evidence meant to bring transparency was itself incomplete, and possibly curated.


    to contact me:


    bobbycapucci@protonmail.com


    Show more Show less
    45 mins
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