A federal judge on Wednesdayunsealeda purported suicide note attributed to Jeffrey Epstein,written before his first reported incident in July 2019 and discovered by his then-cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, tucked inside a graphic novel. The undated, unsigned document - released as part of Tartaglione’s unrelated criminal case docket - contains lines such as "They investigated me for month - found NOTHING!!!" and references to saying goodbye. It has been kept under seal for nearly seven years.
The note’s release comes amid a flood of Epstein-related document dumps in 2025–2026, yet it does little to quiet the persistent, deeply unsettling questions about how Epstein actually died on August 10, 2019, inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in Manhattan.Official ruling: suicide by hanging. Public consensus, reinforced by every major new tranche of files: something about that story has never added up - and the weirdness only multiplies with each disclosure.
Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell shortly before 6:30 a.m. on August 10, 2019. Attorney General William Barr immediately called it an "apparent suicide." The medical examiner ruled it a hanging. Case closed - or so the government insisted.
The facts on the groundwere different:
When jail officials asked Mr. Epstein about red marks on his neck after the incident in July,he first said that Mr. Tartaglione had attacked him and that he was not suicidal. Mr. Tartaglione has long denied assaulting Mr. Epstein, who later told jail officials he “never had any issues” with his cellmate.
Mr. Tartaglione said he gave the note to his lawyers because he believed it could have been helpful if Mr. Epstein continued to claim that he had tried to hurt him. Mr. Tartaglione was convicted in 2023 and is now serving four life sentences. He has maintained his innocence and has appealed his conviction. -NYT
Newly released footage and DOJ admissions confirm thatat approximately 10:39 p.m. on August 9, an "orange-colored shape" moved up the L Tier staircase toward Epstein’s isolated, locked tier. The observation log initially described it as possibly "an inmate escorted up." The DOJ’s Office of Inspector General later called it an unidentified corrections officer carrying orange "linen or bedding." Officers on duty insisted no linen exchange happened that night. Forensic video experts reviewing the pixelated clip concluded it was far more likely a person in an orange jumpsuit.
No one was supposed to have access. The tier was supposed to be under constant visual monitoring. Instead, guards Tova Noel and Michael Thomas - both later fired - falsified more than 75 entries on count sheets and round logs. They were asleep or idle for hours. Required 30-minute checks were never performed after roughly 10:40 p.m. Noel had googled "Latest Epstein jail" at 5:42 a.m. and 5:52 a.m. the morning Epstein was found; she had also made multiple large cash deposits in the preceding months.
The ligature itself - the actual noose - has never been properly accounted for. Guards gave conflicting statements about removing it. One collected item was later rulednotto be the ligature used. It simply vanished from the official record.
Pathologist Dr. Michael Baden, hired by Epstein’s brother Mark, examined the autopsy photos and reached a stark conclusion: the neck fractures (bilateral thyroid cartilage plus left hyoid) were "more consistent with ligature homicidal strangulation" than suicidal hanging.
Source: ZeroHedge News