Epstein Case Disclosure
The Trump administration FBI and DOJ claim that their “exhaustive review of investigative holdings relating to Jeffrey Epstein” did “not uncover evidence that could predicate an investigation against uncharged third parties” and that “no further disclosure” of any evidence in this case is “appropriate or warranted.”
IN FACT, the DOJ sent a letter to a judge in 2019 stating that a search of Epstein’s New York City residence found “compact discs” in “a locked safe” with “hand-written labels” like “Girl pics nude” and “Young [Name] + [Name].”
An FBI agent then testified at Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial that the FBI abandoned this evidence, which allowed one of Epstein’s most notorious accomplices to take and potentially scrub it before giving it to the feds.
Those and at least 16 other rigorously documented facts indicate that others were involved in Epstein’s sex crimes, federal prison officials aided and abetted Epstein’s suicide, and federal employees disappeared evidence that could incriminate Epstein’s companions:
1) Maria Farmer, who reported Jeffrey Epstein and his associates to the FBI all the way back in 1996 for molesting children, told CBS News that Epstein’s mansion in New York was loaded with hidden cameras. Describing a surveillance room with a large number of monitors, she said, “I looked on the cameras, and I saw toilet, toilet, bed, bed, toilet, bed.” She then asked Epstein “What do you do with this?” he replied, “I keep it. I keep everything in my safe.”
2) After the DOJ arrested Epstein in 2019, federal prison officials placed him in a cell with a murderous, hulking ex-cop, which is a death trap for any child molester because they are frequently targeted by violent inmates. This chosen cellmate, named Nicholas Tartaglione, was eventually convicted of torturing and strangling a man to death with a zip tie while making his nephew watch. He then took the nephew, another nephew, and a family friend of the man he murdered to a “remote wooded location, forced them to kneel, and executed them with gunshots to the back of the head.”
3) Less than two weeks after Epstein was placed in a cell with Tartaglione, prison guards found Epstein in the middle of the night in a semiconscious state with a rope and “friction marks” around his neck.
4) Despite a court order requiring the prison to preserve video surveillance footage near Epstein’s cell during the strangulation, federal prison officials failed to do so and also lost the backup due to “technical errors.”
5) Federal prison officials took Epstein off “suicide watch” just one day after the strangulation without determining whether Epstein was attacked by his cellmate or tried to commit suicide.
6) One day before Epstein’s death, federal prison officials removed his new cellmate and didn’t replace him. They did this even though a prison psychologist sent an email to over 70 prison staffers stating that Epstein “needs” a cellmate — a common suicide prevention measure.
7) While describing Jeffery Epstein as “arguably” one of the “most notorious” federal inmates, the DOJ Inspector General wrote that the U.S. Bureau of Prisons “provided” him “with the opportunity to take his own life.”
8) One day before Epstein’s death, a federal court unsealed more than 2,000 pages of lawsuit records that named and implicated wealthy and powerful people in Epstein’s child sex crimes, as well as federal officials in covering up the crimes. Among the named people were Palm Beach billionaire Glenn Dubin and his wife Eva Andersson-Dubin, Britain’s Prince Andrew, former president Bill Clinton, former Democratic Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, former DNC Chairman Bill Richardson, artificial intelligence pioneer Marvin Minsky, and modeling agent Jean-Luc Brunel — who was later arrested in France for sex trafficking and allegedly died of suicide in a high-security prison.
9) One day before Epstein’s death, federal prison officials permitted Epstein to make a completely unmonitored phone call in direct violation of prison policy and under the patently false pretense that he was calling his mother, who had died 15 years earlier.
10) Federal officers placed a hoard of linens in Epstein’s cell, which is commonly prohibited because they can be used to create nooses.
11) Federal officers left Epstein alone in his cell for nearly eight hours on the night he died — despite the fact that they were required to check on all inmates in his unit “at least twice per hour” and were only 15 feet from Epstein’s cell.
12) Federal officers falsified records to show that they had checked on Epstein, a violation of federal law punishable by up to five years in prison.
13) Federal prosecutors “dismissed all charges pending against” the two officers who falsified the records and “declined” to prosecute others who “falsely certified inmate countslips and round sheets on the day before and the day of Epstein’s death.”
14) Federal prison officials failed to record footage from 9 of the 11 surveillance cameras around Epstein’s cell on the night of his death, including one that showed Epstein’s cell tier and cell door.
15) To this day, the federal government hasn’t revealed the names of the people that were written beside the “young” females on Epstein’s CDs.
16) The FBI and DOJ state that “Epstein harmed over one thousand victims” but provide no explanation of how he could have done all that with only one accomplice who has been prosecuted for these crimes (Ghislaine Maxwell).
All of these facts accord with the contention that others were complicit in the death and child sex crimes of Epstein and have not been held accountable.