The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charlie Kirk’s World? | Ep 352

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charlie Kirk’s World? | Ep 352

Steven Feinberg, Trump's Deputy Secretary of Defense and wealthiest administration official, owned DynCorp — a private military company caught running child sex trafficking operations in Bosnia — for a decade.

Jun 18, 2026 56:44 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

Candace Owens investigates whether Jeffrey Epstein's trafficking network reemerged inside Charlie Kirk's orbit, tracing connections between Steven Feinberg (Deputy Secretary of Defense), his ownership of DynCorp — a private military company caught running sex trafficking operations in Bosnia — and Turning Point USA figures. She also scrutinizes Andrew Colvett's mysterious White House visit the day before Epstein files dropped, and riffs on Emily Ratajkowski's viral essay about post-divorce promiscuity as a symbol of feminism's failures. Key takeaway: follow the private military money to understand who benefits from keeping Epstein's network buried.

#Epstein files #private military companies #DynCorp trafficking scandal #Cerberus Capital Management #Trump cabinet #Turning Point USA #FOIA requests #Eastern European trafficking #feminist critique #Emily Ratajkowski #Ukraine corruption #whistleblower #Charlie Kirk death investigation #Blackwater pardons #mercenary contractors #Jeffrey Epstein #DynCorp #Steven Feinberg #Cerberus Capital #private military #Charlie Kirk #Erica Kirk #human trafficking #Bosnia #Ukraine #Blackwater #Pete Hegseth #FOIA #Next Model Management #feminism #Kash Patel #Fort Huachuca #Andrew Colvett

Candace Owens investigates potential links between Jeffrey Epstein's trafficking network and figures in Charlie Kirk's orbit, including the role of DynCorp, private military companies, and Trump administration officials. She also critiques Emily Ratajkowski's viral essay about post-divorce promiscuity.

Chapter list
  • Candace wastes no time: the New York Times has published a detailed account of how the Trump administration panicked over the Epstein files, with top officials gathering in the Situation Room to plot their public messaging strategy. For Candace, the symbolism is damning — the Situation Room is for classified national security emergencies, not for spinning the story of a dead pedophile-trafficker. She then pivots to a scoop she broke earlier: the day before the administration released (a heavily redacted version of) the Epstein files, Charlie Kirk operative Andrew Colvett was spotted inside the White House executive office building. To conceal his Washington presence, Colvett allegedly pre-recorded a Kirk podcast episode with Kash Patel in what Candace characterizes as a deliberate attempt to create a false alibi placing him in Arizona. She has since filed a FOIA request to determine who exactly Colvett was meeting and why, framing the timing as deeply suspicious and potentially connected to the file release strategy.

  • The core investigative thesis unfolds here: a global trafficking operation generating billions of dollars for powerful men does not simply evaporate when its figurehead is arrested or dies. Candace argues the Epstein network pivoted in 2018 — the year Charlie Kirk and Erica Franzfeh began dating, and the exact year the Miami Herald published its landmark exposé triggered by the unsealing of Ghislaine Maxwell's defamation case. Epstein's modus operandi, Candace explains, relied on the modeling and pageantry world: Eastern European women from war-torn countries were recruited under the guise of modeling careers, funneled through agencies, and paraded across runways while the abuse was hidden in plain sight. The pivot point she identifies is Next Model Management in New York, run by Faith Cates — a close Epstein associate who publicly supported him even after his 2009 arrest. Workers at the agency, Candace says, allege that Erica Franzfeh (now Erica Kirk) was the point of contact for the model apartment while Epstein frequently visited. Eastern European models brought through the office were allegedly then flown to Epstein's Virgin Islands parties. Candace calls for a simple, definitive response from Turning Point USA: either confirm or deny Erica's presence there — especially given that Erica Kirk now has direct access to American high schoolers through Turning Point's Club America program.

  • The tonal shift is deliberate: Candace moves from geopolitical conspiracy to pop culture, but the thematic line is continuous — both segments are about what happens when women are misdirected by powerful systems, whether trafficking networks or feminist ideology. The subject is Emily Ratajkowski's essay 'Mother Effer' published in The Cut, which Candace's team apparently could not excerpt much from because of how sexually explicit it is. Ratajkowski, known for nude appearances in the Robin Thicke 'Blurred Lines' video and subsequent Victoria's Secret work, writes about her post-divorce period as a conscious self-reinvention through promiscuity — casting herself as a comic-book villain character (Poison Ivy, Catwoman) who drinks gin martinis and uses men. Candace reads key passages: Ratajkowski's declaration that she 'decided to F her way into a new kind of woman,' her self-congratulatory account of leaving men's beds to be home for her 5-year-old, and her description of dressing in shorts and lip liner for school pickup to provocatively 'navigate the cliquish politics of school drop-off.' Candace's verdict is emphatic: this is not empowerment but a public document of severe depression, possibly linked to postpartum disorder and a traumatic birth. She worries most about what the essay will mean to Ratajkowski's son when he is old enough to read it, and closes with a call for young women listening not to follow this path.

  • The final extended segment is a community conversation with the YouTube and podcast audience, structured around top comments. A comment comparing Candace's basement investigation to the FBI prompts her to deliver a sweeping critique of the Bureau's entire history as a corrupt institution — 'they've never been involved in anything bad' she jokes, before clarifying that she means they have always been compromised. Kash Patel comes in for sharp criticism: Candace says he gives off the energy of someone whose strings are being pulled by others, and who responds to scrutiny with petty rage rather than substantive answers. The question she finds most worth addressing is how Charlie Kirk — a man she describes as no fool — could have been unaware of what was happening in his own orbit. Her answer is intimate and psychologically precise: Charlie saved himself for marriage, making Erica his first real relationship. In that context, a husband naturally makes his wife his primary confidant, and if a wife signals 'lean into faith,' a trusting Christian husband simply does so — bringing in her pastors, her ministry contacts, without suspicion. Candace explicitly includes herself in this category of misplaced trust: she was naive about Tyler Boyer and Andrew Colvin while working alongside them, and she trusted Trump for years. Manipulation works through intimacy, and Charlie was simply naive in the ways that many good people are.

AUM (Assets Under Management)
The total market value of investments that a financial institution manages on behalf of clients; used here to describe the $70 billion scale of Cerberus Capital Management.
Private Military Company (PMC)
A private firm that provides military services — combat, security, logistics, intelligence — typically contracted by governments wanting operations off the official books.
Plausible deniability
The ability of officials to deny knowledge of or responsibility for wrongdoing, often by routing actions through intermediaries like private contractors.
Cerberus Capital Management
A major US private equity firm co-founded by Steven Feinberg in 1992; named after the three-headed dog guarding the underworld in Greek mythology; known for acquiring distressed companies.
DynCorp
A US-based private military and government services company that came under Cerberus Capital ownership in 2010; previously implicated in a sex trafficking scandal in Bosnia in the late 1990s.
FOIA (Freedom of Information Act)
A US law allowing citizens and journalists to request access to federal government records; used by Candace Owens to try to obtain flight logs and schedules related to her investigation.
Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence
A senior Pentagon official overseeing all intelligence activities of the Department of Defense; in this episode, refers to Bradley Hansell, who sits below the Deputy Secretary.
SAM 702
A specific US military aircraft flight designation referenced by Candace Owens as having flown to Tucson and Fort Huachuca, Arizona, two days before Charlie Kirk's death.
Fort Huachuca
A US Army intelligence base in southeastern Arizona; central to Candace Owens's investigation as the destination of the SAM 702 flight.
International Police Task Force (IPTF)
A United Nations civilian police force created after the Bosnian war under NATO auspices; implicated in the DynCorp sex trafficking scandal it was supposed to prevent.
Pale of Settlement
A region of the Russian Empire — covering parts of modern Ukraine, Poland, Belarus, and the Baltics — where Jews were legally required to live from 1791 to 1917.
Blackwater
A US private military company founded by Erik Prince (Betsy DeVos's brother) that received $2 billion in government contracts before its contractors killed 14 Iraqi civilians in a 2007 massacre.
Aubergine
The British English word for eggplant; derives from the original variety's egg-like shape; used by Candace in a lighthearted digression about US vs UK English.
Ghislaine Maxwell
Jeffrey Epstein's associate and alleged co-conspirator in his sex trafficking network; a defamation lawsuit involving her was unsealed in 2018, helping trigger the Epstein exposé.
Douay-Rheims Bible
An English translation of the Catholic Bible from the Latin Vulgate, originally published 1582–1610; advertised in this episode via Loreto Publications' 1859 Haydock edition.
Perunctory
Not used in this episode; replaced below by an actual term from the transcript.
Laundromat (financial)
Informal term for a country or financial system used to process and legitimize illicitly obtained money; Candace uses it to describe Ukraine's role in Western political corruption.
Next Model Management
A New York talent and modeling agency run by Faith Cates, a close associate of Jeffrey Epstein who continued to support him after his 2009 arrest; central to Candace's investigation of Erica Kirk.
Truman Show
1998 film in which the protagonist unknowingly lives inside a scripted reality; used by Candace as a metaphor for a government-manufactured media narrative surrounding the Kirks.

Chapter 1 · 00:00

Start

Candace wastes no time: the New York Times has published a detailed account of how the Trump administration panicked over the Epstein files, with top officials gathering in the Situation Room to plot their public messaging strategy. For Candace, the symbolism is damning — the Situation Room is for classified national security emergencies, not for spinning the story of a dead pedophile-trafficker. She then pivots to a scoop she broke earlier: the day before the administration released (a heavily redacted version of) the Epstein files, Charlie Kirk operative Andrew Colvett was spotted inside the White House executive office building. To conceal his Washington presence, Colvett allegedly pre-recorded a Kirk podcast episode with Kash Patel in what Candace characterizes as a deliberate attempt to create a false alibi placing him in Arizona. She has since filed a FOIA request to determine who exactly Colvett was meeting and why, framing the timing as deeply suspicious and potentially connected to the file release strategy.

Claims made here

According to the New York Times, Trump met with top officials in the White House Situation Room to strategize how to handle and misdirect the public on the Epstein files.

Candace Owens The New York Times

Andrew Colvett was seen at the White House executive office building the day before the Epstein files were released, while pre-recording a Charlie Kirk show with Kash Patel to appear to be in Arizona.

Candace Owens no source cited

News
Andrew Colvett's Mysterious White House Visit

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 News

The day before the Trump administration was forced to release the Epstein files, Andrew Colvett was spotted at the White House executive office building — while simultaneously faking a live Charlie Kirk show with Kash Patel to create an alibi placing him in Arizona. The timing raises a direct question: who was he meeting, and what was being coordinated?

Chapter 2 · 02:27

The new Epstein network?

The core investigative thesis unfolds here: a global trafficking operation generating billions of dollars for powerful men does not simply evaporate when its figurehead is arrested or dies. Candace argues the Epstein network pivoted in 2018 — the year Charlie Kirk and Erica Franzfeh began dating, and the exact year the Miami Herald published its landmark exposé triggered by the unsealing of Ghislaine Maxwell's defamation case. Epstein's modus operandi, Candace explains, relied on the modeling and pageantry world: Eastern European women from war-torn countries were recruited under the guise of modeling careers, funneled through agencies, and paraded across runways while the abuse was hidden in plain sight. The pivot point she identifies is Next Model Management in New York, run by Faith Cates — a close Epstein associate who publicly supported him even after his 2009 arrest. Workers at the agency, Candace says, allege that Erica Franzfeh (now Erica Kirk) was the point of contact for the model apartment while Epstein frequently visited. Eastern European models brought through the office were allegedly then flown to Epstein's Virgin Islands parties. Candace calls for a simple, definitive response from Turning Point USA: either confirm or deny Erica's presence there — especially given that Erica Kirk now has direct access to American high schoolers through Turning Point's Club America program.

Claims made here

Erica Kirk (née Franzfeh) was the point of contact for the model apartment at Next Model Management, a New York agency run by Epstein associate Faith Cates, where Epstein frequently visited.

Candace Owens no source cited

The SAM 702 flight organized by Bradley Hansell's office flew to Tucson, Arizona on September 8, stayed approximately 4 hours, then flew to Fort Huachuca, where it remained overnight before departing for El Paso on September 9.

Candace Owens no source cited

Bradley Hansell, Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence, previously worked for the Boston Consulting Group where Mitt Romney and Bibi Netanyahu became close.

Candace Owens no source cited

Candace Owens's FOIA request about the SAM 702 flight was assigned position number 3,500 in the queue under a 'heavy burden' exception requiring coordination with multiple departments.

Candace Owens no source cited

Cerberus Capital Management, co-founded by Steven Feinberg, manages $70 billion in assets under management.

Candace Owens no source cited

Blackwater received $2 billion in US government contracts between 1997 and 2010.

Candace Owens no source cited

Blackwater contractors killed 14 Iraqi civilians and injured 20 others while escorting a US embassy convoy; four men were convicted, and all were later pardoned by Trump in his first term.

Candace Owens no source cited

Betsy DeVos, Trump's first-term Secretary of Education, is the sister of Blackwater founder Erik Prince.

Candace Owens no source cited

DynCorp employees in Bosnia purchased underage women from Ukraine, Croatia, Bosnia, and Romania and forced them into prostitution, exposed by investigator Catherine Bulkebach who was then fired.

Candace Owens no source cited

Cerberus Capital Management owned DynCorp from 2010 to 2020, during which time a movie about DynCorp's trafficking scandal was released.

Candace Owens no source cited

True Crime
The Epstein Network's Pivot: From Modeling to Turning Point?

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 True Crime

Epstein's trafficking network was deeply embedded in pageantry, modeling agencies, and Eastern European recruitment. When the scandal broke in 2018, Candace argues the network didn't dissolve — it pivoted. And the timing of Erica Kirk entering Charlie Kirk's life, allegedly connected to Epstein associate Faith Cates's modeling office, is too precise to ignore.

True Crime
Erica Kirk and Next Model Management

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 True Crime

Workers at Next Model Management — a talent agency run by Faith Cates, a close Jeffrey Epstein associate who never turned her back on him — alleged that Erica Kirk was the point of contact for the model apartment. Eastern European models brought through the office were reportedly flown to Epstein's parties in the Virgin Islands.

Government
Steven Feinberg: Trump's Wealthiest Official Owned a Trafficking-Linked Mercenary Group

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 Government

Steven Feinberg, the wealthiest person in the Trump administration at roughly $5 billion net worth, co-founded Cerberus Capital Management — a $70 billion fund that owned DynCorp, a private military company caught running sex trafficking operations in Bosnia, from 2010 to 2020. He is now one step below Pete Hegseth at the Department of Defense.

Government
How Private Military Companies Provide Plausible Deniability

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 Government

Private military companies are legally contracted by the US government to carry out operations — arming rebels, toppling foreign governments — that can't appear in official records. When something goes wrong, the government simply says it didn't know. Taxpayers are financing institutional plausible deniability.

Government
Blackwater: $2 Billion in Contracts, 14 Dead Civilians, and a Presidential Pardon

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 Government

Blackwater received $2 billion in US government contracts before its contractors killed 14 Iraqi civilians escorting a US embassy convoy. Four men were convicted — one for murder. Trump pardoned all of them in his first term. His Secretary of Education at the time? Betsy DeVos, whose brother Erik Prince founded Blackwater.

True Crime
DynCorp's Bosnia Sex Trafficking Scandal

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 True Crime

DynCorp employees in Bosnia were caught buying underage women from Ukraine, Croatia, Bosnia, and Romania, forcing them into prostitution. When investigator Catherine Bulkebach exposed it, she was fired. The contractors enjoyed full immunity from prosecution in foreign territories — and DynCorp faced no meaningful consequences.

News
Ukraine's Orphan Ministry Network and the Turning Point Connection

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 News

Elizabeth Kravchuk, wife of Turning Point's Mikey McCoy and a wealthy Ukrainian, runs a ministry rescuing orphans in Ukraine called The Good Call Ministries. Candace notes that nearly everyone connected to Turning Point USA has a charity focused on Ukrainian orphans — and treats that pattern as suspicious given Ukraine's reputation as a financial laundromat.

Government
The Truman Show Isn't Just Charlie's — It's Ours

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 Government

Candace argues the Department of Defense — specifically the offices of Bradley Hansell and Steven Feinberg — orchestrated a media campaign to artificially make Erica Kirk the number one trending topic after Charlie's death. She says none of us are safe if a government apparatus can run a grief narrative as a covert operation.

Chapter 3 · 32:31

Emily Ratajkowski's degrading essay

The tonal shift is deliberate: Candace moves from geopolitical conspiracy to pop culture, but the thematic line is continuous — both segments are about what happens when women are misdirected by powerful systems, whether trafficking networks or feminist ideology. The subject is Emily Ratajkowski's essay 'Mother Effer' published in The Cut, which Candace's team apparently could not excerpt much from because of how sexually explicit it is. Ratajkowski, known for nude appearances in the Robin Thicke 'Blurred Lines' video and subsequent Victoria's Secret work, writes about her post-divorce period as a conscious self-reinvention through promiscuity — casting herself as a comic-book villain character (Poison Ivy, Catwoman) who drinks gin martinis and uses men. Candace reads key passages: Ratajkowski's declaration that she 'decided to F her way into a new kind of woman,' her self-congratulatory account of leaving men's beds to be home for her 5-year-old, and her description of dressing in shorts and lip liner for school pickup to provocatively 'navigate the cliquish politics of school drop-off.' Candace's verdict is emphatic: this is not empowerment but a public document of severe depression, possibly linked to postpartum disorder and a traumatic birth. She worries most about what the essay will mean to Ratajkowski's son when he is old enough to read it, and closes with a call for young women listening not to follow this path.

Claims made here

Emily Ratajkowski rose to fame in the Robin Thicke 'Blurred Lines' music video and has since been presented as a Victoria's Secret model.

Candace Owens no source cited

Society & Culture
Emily Ratajkowski's Essay: A Manifesto of Modern Misery

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 Society & Culture

Emily Ratajkowski's essay in The Cut describes intentionally embracing promiscuity as post-divorce empowerment — dressing provocatively for her 5-year-old's school pickup to 'punish men.' Candace argues this is clinical depression masquerading as feminism, and the most degrading piece of writing she's encountered in years.

Chapter 4 · 43:10

Comments

The final extended segment is a community conversation with the YouTube and podcast audience, structured around top comments. A comment comparing Candace's basement investigation to the FBI prompts her to deliver a sweeping critique of the Bureau's entire history as a corrupt institution — 'they've never been involved in anything bad' she jokes, before clarifying that she means they have always been compromised. Kash Patel comes in for sharp criticism: Candace says he gives off the energy of someone whose strings are being pulled by others, and who responds to scrutiny with petty rage rather than substantive answers. The question she finds most worth addressing is how Charlie Kirk — a man she describes as no fool — could have been unaware of what was happening in his own orbit. Her answer is intimate and psychologically precise: Charlie saved himself for marriage, making Erica his first real relationship. In that context, a husband naturally makes his wife his primary confidant, and if a wife signals 'lean into faith,' a trusting Christian husband simply does so — bringing in her pastors, her ministry contacts, without suspicion. Candace explicitly includes herself in this category of misplaced trust: she was naive about Tyler Boyer and Andrew Colvin while working alongside them, and she trusted Trump for years. Manipulation works through intimacy, and Charlie was simply naive in the ways that many good people are.

Claims made here

C15 (pentadecanoic acid) is the first essential fatty acid discovered in more than 90 years, originally studied by Dr. Stephanie Van Watson while working with the US Navy on aging dolphins.

Candace Owens Dr. Stephanie Van Watson / US Navy research

Society & Culture
Why Didn't Charlie Know? Because He Trusted His Wife

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 Society & Culture

Candace responds to listener questions about how Charlie Kirk could have been unaware of what was happening around him. She argues that trust — especially in a spouse — is the most effective vector for manipulation. Charlie, who saved himself for marriage and put Erica in charge of the faith dimension of his life, had no reason to be suspicious.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

True Crime
DynCorp's Bosnia Sex Trafficking Scandal

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 True Crime

DynCorp employees in Bosnia were caught buying underage women from Ukraine, Croatia, Bosnia, and Romania, forcing them into prostitution. When investigator Catherine Bulkebach exposed it, she was fired. The contractors enjoyed full immunity from prosecution in foreign territories — and DynCorp faced no meaningful consequences.

Government
Steven Feinberg: Trump's Wealthiest Official Owned a Trafficking-Linked Mercenary Group

The Whistleblower: Did Epstein’s Network Reemerge In Charli… · Jun 18, 2026 Government

Steven Feinberg, the wealthiest person in the Trump administration at roughly $5 billion net worth, co-founded Cerberus Capital Management — a $70 billion fund that owned DynCorp, a private military company caught running sex trafficking operations in Bosnia, from 2010 to 2020. He is now one step below Pete Hegseth at the Department of Defense.

Snapshots ()

Key Quotes ()

This episode

Cast

Stats

Episode stats

Insight Overview

insights
chapters

Insight distribution

Sub-Categories

Speaker breakdown

Talk Time

This episode

Claims & Sources

2 / 14 cited (14%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

According to the New York Times, Trump met with top officials in the White House Situation Room to strategize how to handle and misdirect the public on the Epstein files.

Candace Owens The New York Times

Andrew Colvett was seen at the White House executive office building the day before the Epstein files were released, while pre-recording a Charlie Kirk show with Kash Patel to appear to be in Arizona.

Candace Owens no source cited

Erica Kirk (née Franzfeh) was the point of contact for the model apartment at Next Model Management, a New York agency run by Epstein associate Faith Cates, where Epstein frequently visited.

Candace Owens no source cited

Cerberus Capital Management, co-founded by Steven Feinberg, manages $70 billion in assets under management.

Candace Owens no source cited

DynCorp employees in Bosnia purchased underage women from Ukraine, Croatia, Bosnia, and Romania and forced them into prostitution, exposed by investigator Catherine Bulkebach who was then fired.

Candace Owens no source cited

Blackwater received $2 billion in US government contracts between 1997 and 2010.

Candace Owens no source cited

Blackwater contractors killed 14 Iraqi civilians and injured 20 others while escorting a US embassy convoy; four men were convicted, and all were later pardoned by Trump in his first term.

Candace Owens no source cited

Betsy DeVos, Trump's first-term Secretary of Education, is the sister of Blackwater founder Erik Prince.

Candace Owens no source cited

Cerberus Capital Management owned DynCorp from 2010 to 2020, during which time a movie about DynCorp's trafficking scandal was released.

Candace Owens no source cited

The SAM 702 flight organized by Bradley Hansell's office flew to Tucson, Arizona on September 8, stayed approximately 4 hours, then flew to Fort Huachuca, where it remained overnight before departing for El Paso on September 9.

Candace Owens no source cited

Bradley Hansell, Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence, previously worked for the Boston Consulting Group where Mitt Romney and Bibi Netanyahu became close.

Candace Owens no source cited

Candace Owens's FOIA request about the SAM 702 flight was assigned position number 3,500 in the queue under a 'heavy burden' exception requiring coordination with multiple departments.

Candace Owens no source cited

C15 (pentadecanoic acid) is the first essential fatty acid discovered in more than 90 years, originally studied by Dr. Stephanie Van Watson while working with the US Navy on aging dolphins.

Candace Owens Dr. Stephanie Van Watson / US Navy research

Emily Ratajkowski rose to fame in the Robin Thicke 'Blurred Lines' music video and has since been presented as a Victoria's Secret model.

Candace Owens no source cited