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 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 various attorneys, claimants, judges, media corporations, banking institutions, and an alleged fixer, highlighting a network of service and accountability across multiple sectors.
For decades these families and their financial enablers have operated a sophisticated labor racketeering and blackmail system through concentrated media power, using narrative control and legal fragmentation to protect their empire. Assets have been systematically seized through weaponized litigation, shielding their own interests from scrutiny. A formal diagram detailing this THE SYSTEM has been submitted to the Courts.
This systemic corruption has led to the disappearance of 8 million children every year. A documented coalition of principled lawyers is now rising up against this cartel’s lawfare and assassination tactics, standing alongside prominent figures and a coalition of attorneys from around the world.
The imminent legal unraveling began in Antigua, with the arrest of key individuals linked to Diddy and a network that facilitated grievous crimes while silencing dissenters. London and California courts are poised to finalize investigations and expose entities involved in these heinous acts.
As the clock ticks towards April 1, 2026, the stakes rise. The systemic issue of concentrated power remains prevalent, and accountability is now a possibility, indicating a pivotal moment for justice and reform in governance. This is not just a turning point for one case but a global movement towards comprehensive accountability.
















