Did Jeffrey Epstein Kill Himself? The Stars Scream the Answer
An astrological autopsy of one of the most suspicious deaths of our time.
Last week, Donald Trump and his Attorney General Pam Bondi shocked the world by doing a complete 180 on the Jeffrey Epstein case.
After years of insisting that a client list existed, after making it a central promise of his election campaign to “release the files on day one of his presidency”, after months of Bondi claiming those files were “on her desk”, last week she claimed emphatically that no Epstein client list existed.
Nothing to see.
No names to name.
Case closed.
Then the Trump administration released a previously unseen video that they claimed captured Jeffrey Epstein’s final moments in prison, but exactly one minute before midnight, the footage cut to black, flickered and glitched, and then resumed a few minutes later. That single missing minute happened to coincide with the time forensic experts estimate Epstein died.
Wired Magazine conducted a forensic analysis of the clip and reported that it had been digitally altered. Glitches were inconsistent with standard compression errors. The timecode showed anomalies. And the metadata, according to Wired, “did not align with standard MCC surveillance export protocols.”
In other words, it wasn’t just incomplete. It looked doctored.
What was meant to silence speculation only inflamed it.
This wasn’t closure - it was a badly stitched-together story,
delivered just as the truth was threatening to break through.
And then Trump melted down.
In a late-night barrage of posts, he blamed Obama and Hillary Clinton for “writing the Epstein files” (the ones that his administration had just denied ever existed), he called the whole thing a hoax, and begged his supporters to “stop talking about Epstein.”
The response was seismic.
Social media exploded.
MAGA influencers accused him of betrayal.
And this week, Democrats in Congress introduced a motion to release the unredacted Epstein files, but Republicans voted it down.
Relentless promises of transparency have descended into what appears to be one of the biggest cover-ups in modern political history.
But the public see right through it.
It seems nobody trusts the footage, the press releases, or the politicians.
People want answers, and they want them now.
So where do we turn when every institution appears to have failed?
Well, I always turn to the stars.
Because the night Epstein died was not just another night behind bars.
It was a cosmic crime scene.
And the astrology tells a story far more disturbing than anything we’ve heard so far.
Who Was Jeffrey Epstein?
Jeffrey Epstein was never just a creep with a private jet.
He was a math teacher from Brooklyn who somehow became a billionaire with no real business, no visible talent, and no obvious source of wealth. The turning point was his relationship with retail mogul Les Wexner, the founder of L Brands - the empire behind Victoria’s Secret, Abercrombie & Fitch, and Bath & Body Works.
The Wexner Connection
Epstein and Wexner met in the mid-1980s through mutual connections in the financial world, and within a few years, Wexner had not only made Epstein his personal financial advisor - he handed him sweeping power of attorney. That gave Epstein legal control over Wexner’s finances, his real estate, even his charitable foundations.
According to reports, Wexner gifted Epstein a $77 million Manhattan townhouse - one of the largest private residences in New York - and allowed him to manage hundreds of millions of dollars in assets. To this day, there’s no public record of Epstein charging Wexner advisory fees, selling a product, or running a legitimate fund, yet Epstein’s wealth ballooned, and his access exploded.
He was suddenly cashed-up, well-connected, and hosting parties with presidents and princes. He began collecting property like trophies - mansions in Palm Beach, New Mexico, Paris, and his private island in the Caribbean. But there was no real business behind any of it. No IPO. No balance sheet. Just a man with mysterious money and a growing Rolodex of the powerful and perverse. It’s never been made clear exactly how Epstein got rich, but it’s very clear who opened the vault.
Epstein became friends with Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Prince Andrew, Elon Musk, Larry Summers, Stephen Hawking, Steve Bannon, Ehud Barak, and just about everyone who’s ever had their name on a private jet manifest. He was photographed with royalty, scientists, world leaders, tech billionaires, Harvard deans, and former prime ministers.
Alongside Ghislaine Maxwell - his socialite-turned-recruiter and alleged co-conspirator - he built a web of power, seduction, and silence that stretched from Palm Beach to Paris, from London to Tel Aviv, from MIT to Mar-a-Lago.
The First Arrest, and the Cover-Up
In 2008, Epstein was arrested in Florida after a lengthy investigation uncovered a disturbing pattern: dozens of underage girls, some as young as 14, had been lured to his Palm Beach mansion, paid for “massages”, and then sexually abused and trafficked. Law enforcement had mountains of evidence, including witness testimony, flight records, seized phonebooks, and surveillance.
The case was airtight, but the outcome was anything but.
Instead of facing federal sex trafficking charges (which could have put him behind bars for life) Epstein was handed a secretive, non-prosecution agreement. He pled guilty to two minor state charges: solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of a minor. That’s it.
He served just 13 months in a private wing of the Palm Beach County jail, was allowed to leave the facility for up to 12 hours a day, six days a week on “work release,” and had his driver pick him up daily while he continued business as usual.
The deal also shut down the federal investigation, granted immunity to his unnamed co-conspirators, and - most outrageously - was kept hidden from the victims, violating their rights under federal law.
It was, by every legal standard, a fix. A stitch-up. A get-out-of-jail-free card stamped by then–U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta, who later claimed he was told to back off because Epstein “belonged to intelligence.” Acosta would go on to serve as Donald Trump’s Secretary of Labor.
This wasn’t justice - it was protection for a man whose rise wasn’t just improbable, it would have been impossible, unless someone powerful had wanted him there.