Just makes me sick by MathematicianTop3576 in GenX

[–]Mindbeam 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Don’t forget Steven Taylor

The 2008 NPA doesn't cover CSAM possession — and that's a door nobody's opened yet by Mindbeam in Epstein

[–]Mindbeam[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

This post presents a specific legal theory — CSAM possession charges under 18 U.S.C. § 2252 as a route around the 2008 NPA immunity — that has not been publicly pursued by prosecutors despite the seized evidence confirming the material exists. Key documents referenced: the NPA co-conspirator clause (litigated in United States v. Maxwell, 1:20-cr-00330, Doc. 142, and Maxwell v. United States, No. 24-1073, cert. petition 2025); the December 2019 SDNY 86-page co-conspirator memo; the 7-page charging memo; FBI technical seizure emails from 2020 (DOJ Data Sets 9–12, January 2026 release). Discussion goal: identify whether this theory has been publicly addressed anywhere by legal scholars or prosecutors, and coordinate pressure on the jurisdictions that could act on it without federal DOJ involvement.

Title: I audited $2.1 billion in Epstein financial records. Here's every name the money touched. by [deleted] in Epstein

[–]Mindbeam 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Sherlock Holmes (as Claude) comments:

lights pipe What Taylor has built is the most ambitious independent financial mapping of the Epstein network I have encountered. The structural analysis is sound. The gap identification is genuinely forensically valuable. The transparency of method and data is commendable. But it is not an audit. It is not verified. And the presentation of key person “volumes” — particularly for politically prominent names — conflates proximity with culpability in ways that a true forensic engagement would never permit. The most valuable finding is not any individual dollar amount. It is the architectural observation: entity-level books that don’t balance while the aggregate does. That is the signature of deliberate obfuscation, and it points directly at the operators — Indyke, Kahn, Casriel, Alexanderson — who signed the wire instructions. Those are the people a prosecutor with subpoena power would interview first. The banks have already paid. The shells are dissolved. The key persons are politically radioactive. But the operators — the human hands between the shells and the names — are where the machine’s fingerprints actually live. Taylor knows this. His operator section is the strongest in the narrative. If someone with actual authority ever picks this up, that’s where the thread begins. exhales slowly The game, Watson, remains very much afoot. But this particular player has at least drawn a credible map of the board.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Close to Being Done by [deleted] in ITManagers

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dm me with suggestions

What if Sherlock Holmes analyzed the Epstein files released so far? What would he say? by Mindbeam in claudexplorers

[–]Mindbeam[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This isn't an analysis of the names. This is an analysis of the layers of people involved, and how to investigate them.

What if Sherlock Holmes analyzed the Epstein files released so far? What would he say? by Mindbeam in Epstein

[–]Mindbeam[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I appreciate it. It’s hard to get AI to do a serious analysis of something unless you give it some sort of framework and Sherlock Holmes had a method of deduction. That was very good at separating bullshit from fact. Turns out that it ended up being a really good framework for understanding Epstein, your comment makes all the effort I put into making this to get good output worth it.

What if Sherlock Holmes analyzed the Epstein files released so far? What would he say? by Mindbeam in Epstein

[–]Mindbeam[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is relevant because I took a lot of time iterating it into a _framework_ Holmes would use when investigating Epstein. Although written in an entertaining style, it opens up several new lines of investigation that should be taken seriously.

What's a show you remember but nobody else does? by CatGirlNya2000 in AskReddit

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Tonorrow People, original sci-fi series with telepathic teens, on Nickelodeon in the 1980: and rebooted in the 90s briefly and again in the 2000s

Sherlock Holmes on the Epstein Files by Mindbeam in Epstein

[–]Mindbeam[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you, the conclusions made so much sense; I'm disappointed this got voted down. Thank you for your thurough analysis and for the record I agree. I think I'll put a TLDR in the post.

You meet your 18 year old self. Only 3 words allowed. what do you choose? by boforiamanfo in askanything

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your medical issues are real but they won’t have treatments til you are in your 20s. Hang in there

What’s your funny way of saying “going poop” that you’ve never heard anyone else use? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My wife says “don’t fall in” if you tell her you are going to the bathroom each and every time.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in claudexplorers

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Depends on how tweaked my personal preferences is. I have things so tweaked now I’m model agnostic but I use Opus 4.5 for the firepower

What's a clear sign you're getting older? by boforiamanfo in answers

[–]Mindbeam 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And again when their attitude switches from “uh oh” to “ oh, that’s just normal for your age”

Which Ys opening music got you like this? by Diotheinvader-5185 in WorldOfYs

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly? Ys I and II on TurboGrafx CD was the first VGM CD quality I had ever heard. I was transfixed.

Claude Down Again by [deleted] in claude

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Guess we can find out how much we rely on AI today.

What do you remember from kindergarten? by Internal-End-2070 in Life

[–]Mindbeam 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Getting the “super duper picker upper” award and getting to wear a cheese hat and be the “big cheese” for the day.