Podcast thumbnail for Redacted Report Podcast

Redacted Report Podcast

Claim This Podcast

by Redacted Report

15 episodes
Updated Daily
Accepts GuestsHas SponsorsLocation 🇺🇸

Podcast Overview

Exploring power, secrecy and influence Linktr.ee/redactedreport <br/><br/><a href="https://redactedreport.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast">redactedreport.substack.com</a>

Language

🇺🇲

Publishing Since

1/25/2026

1 verified contact email on file for Redacted Report Podcast

Pitch yourself as a guest, propose sponsorships, or reach out directly to the host.

Recent Episodes

Episode thumbnail for Britney's DUI, Secret Neighbors, and the Hollywood Silence Machine: What They're Not Telling You

March 28, 2026

Britney's DUI, Secret Neighbors, and the Hollywood Silence Machine: What They're Not Telling You

<p>Let’s talk about what’s really happening here — because the mainstream media is going to spin this as a feel-good celebrity neighbor story, and I am NOT going to let that slide.</p><p>Britney Spears just got hit with a DUI arrest March, 2026. That’s not gossip. That’s a woman in crisis. And what does Hollywood do? They trot out AJ McLean from the Backstreet Boys at the iHeartRadio Music Awards to tell Page Six that he ‘always gives her a hug.’ A HUG. That’s the support system? A neighbor with good vibes?</p><p>Think about this. Britney spent over a decade under a conservatorship that the courts, her family, and the entertainment industry allowed to happen. She was legally not considered capable of controlling her own life. And now that she’s ‘free’ — she’s arrested, struggling, and the best the industry can offer is a quote from AJ McLean on a red carpet?</p><p>Meanwhile, Lionel Richie is out here publicly shaming celebrities who ignore their fans — saying ‘I hope you like people’ like some kind of moral authority. But where is that same energy for Britney? Where is the industry accountability? Where are the powerful people who profited off her for DECADES?</p><p>And then there’s the royals. Liz Truss — the woman who held the job of British Prime Minister for 45 days, the same 45 days Queen Elizabeth II died — is now casually throwing shade at Harry and Meghan, saying California can keep them. This is the same political establishment that many believe actively worked to push Harry and Meghan OUT of the royal family. And now leaked sourcing wars are happening inside Harry’s camp, with fingers pointing at biographer Tom Bower as the mole feeding stories to Variety.</p><p>Leaks. Silence. Controlled narratives. Sound familiar?</p><p>Here’s what connects all of this: the entertainment and political elite operate the same way. They build you up, extract everything they can, and when you start to crack — they send a neighbor to give you a hug and move on.</p><p>Britney’s story isn’t over. And something tells me the full picture of what happened to her — and who allowed it — hasn’t been told yet.</p><p>Dig into the documents. Follow the money. And stay subscribed — because next week, we’re going deeper into who really controlled Britney’s world, and the names might surprise you.</p><p>Want to go deeper? Visit us at <a target="_blank" href="https://theredactedreport.com">https://theredactedreport.com</a> for more stories they don’t want you to see.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Redacted Report at <a href="https://redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe</a>

Episode thumbnail for CIA Experiment That Created ISIS

March 19, 2026

CIA Experiment That Created ISIS

<p>There are moments in history that don’t just shock you — they echo.</p><p>What you’re watching now… feels like one of them.</p><p>This video circulates. Allegations of abuse so severe they leave permanent damage — broken ribs, internal injuries, emergency surgery just to survive. Then the detail that sticks in your throat: no accountability. Charges dropped. Silence.</p><p>And if something about this feels familiar… it should.</p><p>Because we’ve seen this before.</p><p>The Echo of Abu Ghraib</p><p>Back in the early 2000s, images from Abu Ghraib prison spread across the world. Prisoners humiliated. Tortured. Dehumanized. At the time, it was framed as a scandal — a few bad actors, a breakdown in discipline.</p><p>But years later, deeper layers came out.</p><p>Reports, investigations, and declassified material revealed something more calculated behind parts of the detention and interrogation system. Psychologists were brought in. Techniques were systematized. Methods were tested.</p><p>Whether you call it “enhanced interrogation,” psychological conditioning, or something darker — the result was the same:</p><p>Human beings pushed past the breaking point.</p><p>What Happens After the Breaking Point?</p><p>Violence doesn’t just end when the abuse stops.</p><p>It mutates.</p><p>Many analysts and researchers have pointed out a disturbing pattern: environments of extreme detention and abuse have historically acted as <strong>incubators</strong> — places where resentment, trauma, and ideology collide.</p><p>* Trauma radicalizes</p><p>* Humiliation fuels identity</p><p>* Violence reshapes belief systems</p><p>* And shared suffering builds networks</p><p>In Iraq, prisons became networking hubs. People who entered as individuals left with connections, purpose, and rage.</p><p>That’s not speculation — that’s been documented by journalists, military analysts, and former officials alike.</p><p>So when a this video surfaces…</p><p>When a detainee is sexually and physically abused resulting in severe injury….</p><p>When accountability disappears…</p><p>The question isn’t just “what happened here?”</p><p>The real question is:</p><p><strong>What does this create next?</strong></p><p>Because history suggests something uncomfortable:</p><p>Not every consequence shows up immediately.</p><p>Some take years.</p><p>Here’s the pattern:</p><p>* <strong>Abuse happens</strong></p><p>* <strong>It’s justified, denied, or ignored</strong></p><p>* <strong>Victims carry trauma forward</strong></p><p>* <strong>That trauma spreads through communities</strong></p><p>* <strong>New cycles of violence emerge</strong></p><p>And then — years later — the world acts shocked when a new extremist movement appears out of nowhere.</p><p>Except it didn’t come from nowhere.</p><p>Why This Matters Now</p><p>You don’t have to believe in conspiracies to recognize patterns.</p><p>You don’t have to connect every dot to see the outline forming.</p><p>What you’re witnessing isn’t just a single incident.</p><p>It’s a moment inside a much larger cycle — one that has repeated across different countries, conflicts, and decades.</p><p>And the most unsettling part?</p><p>If the pattern holds…</p><p>The consequences won’t be felt today.</p><p>They’ll be felt later.</p><p>By people who had nothing to do with the original moment.</p><p><p>This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.</p></p><p></p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Redacted Report at <a href="https://redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe</a>

Episode thumbnail for The FBI May Be Helping to Cover Up Prince Andrew’s Alleged Role in the Epstein Scandal

February 12, 2026

The FBI May Be Helping to Cover Up Prince Andrew’s Alleged Role in the Epstein Scandal

<p>In the mid-2000s, as Jeffrey Epstein was being investigated in <a target="_blank" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_Beach,_Florida">Palm Beach, Florida</a>, one of the deputies inside the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office was <a target="_blank" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Mark_Dougan">John Mark Dougan</a>.</p><p>A decade later, Dougan would flee the United States, resurface in Russia and receive asylum. Along the way, he claimed to possess internal Epstein files — copies of digital records, videos, and investigative material from the original 2008 case. He has said that the FBI may be helping to cover up <a target="_blank" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Mountbatten-Windsor">Prince Andrew’s</a> alleged role in the <a target="_blank" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Epstein">Epstein</a> sexual abuse scandal.</p><p>The Palm Beach Investigation</p><p>John Mark Dougan served as a deputy with the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office from roughly 2005 to 2009.</p><p>During that time, the department investigated Jeffrey Epstein for sexually abusing underage girls. That investigation ultimately resulted in Epstein’s controversial 2008 <a target="_blank" href="https://www.justice.gov/opr/page/file/1336471/dl?">federal non-prosecution agreement</a> — often referred to as a “sweetheart deal” — which allowed him to plead guilty to state charges and serve a short sentence with work-release privileges. </p><p>The agreement was negotiated and approved by <a target="_blank" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Acosta">Alexander Acosta</a>, who was then the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida. Nearly a decade later, in 2017, Acosta was appointed <a target="_blank" href="https://www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/OSEC/official-bio-acosta.pdf">U.S. Secretary of Labor</a> under President Donald Trump. He resigned from that position in 2019 after Epstein’s federal arrest renewed scrutiny over the 2008 plea agreement.</p><p>Dougan has since claimed that during his time at the department, he made copies of internal materials related to the Epstein investigation — including digital files, reports, and other evidence.</p><p>Those claims have never been independently verified through public release of documents.</p><p>FBI Investigation and Flight</p><p>In 2016, Dougan was under FBI investigation on charges related to hacking and extortion. According to federal authorities, he had allegedly accessed and distributed confidential law enforcement information.</p><p>Rather than face prosecution, Dougan fled the United States.</p><p>He reportedly drove to Canada and then boarded a flight to Russia.</p><p>The timing was notable. It was 2016 — a year marked by:</p><p>* The U.S. presidential election</p><p>* Heightened scrutiny of Russian interference in American politics</p><p>* Increased focus on digital disinformation operations</p><p>Shortly after arriving in Russia, Dougan was granted asylum. </p><p>Life in Russia</p><p>Once in Russia, Dougan began operating online under aliases. U.S. authorities and investigative reports later linked him to a <a target="_blank" href="https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/fake-news-sites-florida-deputy-sheriff-russia-rcna154315">network of websites</a> that allegedly pushed disinformation narratives targeting Western audiences.</p><p>According to U.S. indictments and intelligence assessments, some of these operations were allegedly connected to Russian influence campaigns. Dougan has denied wrongdoing and has portrayed himself as a whistleblower persecuted by U.S. authorities.</p><p>Public reporting has tied him to the operation of numerous websites presenting themselves as independent news outlets. U.S. officials have alleged that such networks were part of broader efforts to amplify divisive political content.</p><p>These allegations have been detailed in federal charging documents and intelligence briefings, though the full scope of operational control and funding remains part of ongoing geopolitical disputes.</p><p>The Epstein Files Claim</p><p>Central to Dougan’s notoriety is his repeated claim that he possesses internal Epstein investigation materials from his time in Palm Beach.</p><p>Over the years, he has:</p><p>* Claimed to have copies of investigative records</p><p>* Teased information about prominent individuals</p><p>* Suggested he holds damaging material</p><p>However, no comprehensive public release has ever materialized.</p><p>No verified trove of Epstein evidence from Dougan has been authenticated by major investigative outlets.</p><p>This leaves a significant gap between claim and proof.</p><p>The Broader Context</p><p>The Epstein case has generated intense scrutiny because of its connections to powerful individuals across politics, finance, academia, and royalty.</p><p>The original Palm Beach investigation — and the 2008 plea deal — has itself been the subject of Department of Justice review and widespread criticism.</p><p>That history gives weight to any claim of unreleased evidence.</p><p>* If Dougan possesses authentic Epstein files, why have they not been released in full?</p><p>* If he does not, why continue to claim that he does?</p><p>* If sensitive investigative materials were copied from within a sheriff’s office, what does that say about the chain of custody during one of the most controversial criminal cases in recent history?</p><p>The Epstein story continues to produce fragments — claims, leaks, court documents, indictments, and intelligence assessments — but rarely complete clarity.</p><p>John Mark Dougan sits at the intersection of three volatile subjects:</p><p>* The original Epstein prosecution</p><p>* U.S.–Russia geopolitical conflict</p><p>* The modern information war</p><p>Whether he is a whistleblower, a fugitive seeking protection, a propagandist, or some combination of all three depends largely on which documents one trusts — and which remain unseen.</p><p>Until verifiable evidence is produced, the most important distinction remains this:</p><p>Claims are not proof.</p><p>But in the Epstein saga, even the claims have proven powerful enough to reshape headlines across continents.</p><p><p>This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.</p></p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Redacted Report at <a href="https://redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&#38;utm_campaign=CTA_4">redactedreport.substack.com/subscribe</a>

15 total episodes available

Deep-dive analytics for Redacted Report Podcast

Frequently asked questions

Have a different question and can't find the answer you're looking for? Reach out to our support team by sending us an email and we'll get back to you as soon as we can.

What is Redacted Report Podcast?

Exploring power, secrecy and influence Linktr.ee/redactedreport <br/><br/><a href="https://redactedreport.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast">redactedreport.substack.com</a>

How often does this podcast release new episodes?

This podcast updates daily.

Where can I listen to this podcast?

This podcast is available on 4 platforms including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and more. You can also use the RSS feed directly.

Does this podcast accept guests?

Information about guest appearances is not available.

Legal Disclaimer

Pod Engine is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or officially connected with any of the podcasts displayed on this platform. We operate independently as a podcast discovery and analytics service.

All podcast artwork, thumbnails, and content displayed on this page are the property of their respective owners and are protected by applicable copyright laws. This includes, but is not limited to, podcast cover art, episode artwork, show descriptions, episode titles, transcripts, audio snippets, and any other content originating from the podcast creators or their licensors.

We display this content under fair use principles and/or implied license for the purpose of podcast discovery, information, and commentary. We make no claim of ownership over any podcast content, artwork, or related materials shown on this platform. All trademarks, service marks, and trade names are the property of their respective owners.

While we strive to ensure all content usage is properly authorized, if you are a rights holder and believe your content is being used inappropriately or without proper authorization, please contact us immediately at hey@podengine.ai for prompt review and appropriate action, which may include content removal or proper attribution.

By accessing and using this platform, you acknowledge and agree to respect all applicable copyright laws and intellectual property rights of content owners. Any unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or commercial use of the content displayed on this platform is strictly prohibited.