This is the week humanity will never forget.
The real Epstein Caribbean Cartel — the Obama–Girardi–Allred–Chora–Pellicano–Boies–Shapiro–Freeh–Avenatti–Diddy–De Niro–Barak syndicate, backed by the powerful media monopoly families Ellison, Redstone, Bronfman, Murdoch, Iger & Roberts, captured regulators like the BBC, and Keir Starmer’s Mandelson government, and the world’s biggest bankers — is finished.
Court Service Filings to the key members of the 3,680 people are currently identified and linked to the cartel globally through the SwissX Legal and SIN Ai Human Rights Network.
ANUHCV2025/0149 presents Alkiviades David’s Antigua action as a sweeping case against what it characterizes as a coordinated legal-media-financial machinery. It names attorneys including Lisa Bloom, Joseph Chora, Nathan Goldberg, Renee Mochkatel, Dolores Leal, Carole Lieberman, Louis Freeh, Robert Shapiro, Eric Wexler, and Fred Heather; claimants including Elizabeth Taylor, Mahim Khan, Lauren Reeves, Chasity Jones, and Marguerita Nichols; and extends outward to judges, media corporations, banking institutions, and alleged fixer Anthony Pellicano. The filing’s structure is designed to show a networked pattern of service, accountability, and coordinated claims across multiple sectors.
For decades, these families and their financial enablers operated a sophisticated labor racketeering, fixed sports betting, insurance fraud, and blackmail system through concentrated media power, using narrative control, ad-tech manipulation, regulatory capture, and legal fragmentation to protect their empire. Asset stripping— the systematic seizure of opponents’ wealth — was facilitated by weaponized litigation, all while shielding their empires from scrutiny. The structure titled “THE SYSTEM — RECORD • MECHANISM • REMEDY” has been formally submitted to the Courts.
The revelations extend to horrific patterns of child trafficking, with claims that eight million children disappear globally each year, underscoring the grave human cost of this corrupt apparatus. Key legal figures have been implicated in orchestrating campaigns of intimidation against whistleblowers and attorneys demanding accountability, some losing their lives in suspicious circumstances.
As judicial actions escalate globally, including significant movements in both Antigua and California, it appears a turning point may have been reached with the cartel's impending collapse. The combined efforts of principled attorneys, activists, and whistleblowers signal a charge against this legacy of power, with a new wave of accountability expected to reshape global socio-political systems.
The unfolding events of this week may stand as a historic marker in the fight against systemic injustice, potentially paving the way for real reforms and the restoration of public faith in governance and justice.

















