The Diary Of A CEO
Top CIA Security Advisor: Jeffrey Epstein Epstein Was A Made Up Person & They Can See Your Messages!
with Gavin de Becker
2 Mar 2026
27 min read
1h 56m
TL;DR
Gavin de Becker, a top security advisor, reveals that there is no reliable protection for phone privacy—even for presidents—and argues that Jeffrey Epstein was a constructed intelligence asset, likely operated by Israel, used to blackmail powerful figures. He claims senior US government officials know the full story but won't disclose it due to national security concerns and the involvement of allied nations.
Gavin de Becker is a renowned security expert who has designed protective systems for the Supreme Court and worked with some of the world's most powerful figures, from tech billionaires to government officials. His company specializes in anti-assassination strategies, threat assessment, and protective coverage for high-profile clients. In this conversation, he discusses phone security vulnerabilities, the Jeff Bezos hacking case, and presents his analysis of the Jeffrey Epstein files as an intelligence operation.
Takeaways
1
No phone is truly secure from state actors Exploit development is a constant arms race—even if one vulnerability is patched, thousands of researchers worldwide are already working on the next one. This means products claiming to offer "military-grade" phone protection are at best temporarily effective, making behavioral caution (not what you send, only that you send something) the only reliable defense.
2
Epstein was likely a constructed intelligence asset De Becker argues the public persona—billionaire, private island, unlimited wealth—was artificially created and funded (Les Wexner provided $500M). The hidden cameras and eventual audio recordings in his properties suggest a sophisticated blackmail operation designed to compromise powerful figures for intelligence purposes, not personal enrichment.
3
Blackmail through 'rescue' is more effective than threats Rather than demand money directly, operators position themselves as saviors: 'I have the video, but don't worry, I'll handle it.' This turns the blackmailer into a protector and creates lifetime leverage. De Becker notes this is especially powerful when the compromised activity involves underage individuals, as victims become essentially enslaved by fear.