'Terrifying' new Epstein bombshell uncovered by famed reporter: 'Brace yourselves'
An undated photograph of Jeffrey Epstein in a room with bins labelled "CIA" in the background released by the Department of Justice. (DOJ)

In a nearly 3,000-word bombshell report, veteran journalist Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez recently uncovered the company that appears to have constructed Jeffrey Epstein's sprawling New Mexico property, the implications of which, Valdes-Rodriguez wrote, were “terrifying” and made “it hard to sleep.”

Valdes-Rodriguez has uncovered several revelations as it relates to Epstein, largely revolving around his activity in New Mexico, including that his New Mexico property known as Zorro Ranch may have been used to surveil two U.S. nuclear weapons labs, and that the former chief federal prosecutor for the state had previously undisclosed ties to the disgraced financier.

In her latest report, Valdes-Rodriguez told people "brace yourselves" before revealing she uncovered yet another revelation when scanning through the Justice Department’s trove of Epstein-related files: that Zorro Ranch was likely constructed by Bradbury Stamm, a major U.S. government-linked contractor that “does not build individual homes.”

“If you’re not from around here, you might not think twice about seeing ‘Bradbury Stamm’ tucked in there, between the car phones and greenhouses of Zorro Ranch,” Valdes-Rodriguez wrote in her report.

“But if you ARE from around here – here being New Mexico, where my family set down roots in 1598 – then you might, as I did, see ‘Bradbury Stamm’ listed as though it were just another low-wage staffer at the ranch and you’d say ‘What the everloving f---?’ loud enough to wake your dog in the other room. And she’s deaf, and 15 years old.”

According to Valdes-Rodriguez, Bradbury Stamm specializes in “large-scale military, industrial and government contract construction,” and was involved in “constructing the Manhattan Project’s facilities, including the laboratories at Los Alamos, New Mexico, where America's first nuclear weapons were designed and built.”

“This is who Jeffrey Epstein hired to build his ranch house. I know. Weird,” Valdes-Rodriguez wrote.

In actuality, however, there was nothing “weird” about Epstein’s supposed choice to contract Bradbury Stamm to construct Zorro Ranch, Valdes-Rodriguez argued, when considering the property’s strategic location between U.S. nuclear weapons laboratories, one of which was “sold backdoored surveillance software” potentially compromised by Israeli intelligence, according to Valdes-Rodriguez and supported by a declassified FBI document.

When taking those factors into consideration, Valdes-Rodriguez argued, “the choice of Bradbury Stamm to build Jeffrey Epstein’s Haunted House stops seeming odd entirely,” and “starts looking more like exactly the right call.”

“Everything I’m talking about here is public record,” Valdes-Rodriguez wrote. “I’m just putting it together and trying to see patterns, coming up with a hypothesis.”