Jeffrey Epstein, who was found dead in a cell in 2019, died by suicide, not foul play – following a cascade of negligence and mismanagement at the now-shuttered federal jail in New York City where he was housed, said the US justice department’s inspector general.
The inspector general, who released a report Tuesday after a years-long investigation, found that the leadership and staff members at the jail, the federal Metropolitan Correctional Centre, created an environment in which Mr Epstein, a financier charged with sex trafficking, had every opportunity to take his life.
The inspector general, Michael Horowitz, referred two supervisors at the facility responsible for ensuring Epstein’s safety for criminal prosecution by the US attorney for the Southern District of New York after they were caught falsifying records and lying to investigators. But prosecutors declined to bring charges.
While the inspector general concluded the jail’s staff members “engaged in significant misconduct and dereliction of their duties,” investigators – who combed through 100,000 records and conducted dozens of interviews – “did not uncover evidence” that contradicted the FBI’s finding that Epstein had died by his own hand.
‘We need Macron to act.’ The view in Mayotte, the French island territory steamrolled by cyclone Chido
Gisèle Pelicot has rewritten her story – and electrified women all over the world. But what about men?
Berlin culture cuts described as ‘death knell’ for city’s future
‘Shame has changed sides’: Supporters thank Gisèle Pelicot for her bravery as mass rape trial ends
What they did find was a remarkable, and largely unexplained, succession of circumstances that made it easy for Epstein to kill himself. For reasons that remain unclear, the jail’s staff members allowed Epstein to hoard extra blankets, linens, bedding and clothing.
And they violated a standing order intended to prevent Epstein from self-harm, by allowing him to remain alone in his cell for a full day after his cellmate left – after one official sent an email to 70 Bureau of Prisons employees warning them that doing so was dangerous, said the report.
The inspector general’s report comes nearly four years after Epstein (66), was found hanged in his cell. The medical examiner ruled the death a suicide. Epstein had been awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking and conspiracy charges, and if convicted, would have faced up to 45 years in prison.
Almost immediately, an explosion of conspiracy theories suggested he had been killed because of potential secrets he held and his connections to politicians and Wall Street titans.
Two days after Epstein’s death, attorney general William Barr said that there had been “serious irregularities” at the jail. He later attributed the death to “a perfect storm of screw-ups.”
Epstein’s death occurred just over two weeks after he was found in his cell with bruising around his neck in a possible suicide attempt. That occurred the week after a federal judge in Manhattan denied Epstein’s request to be released into home detention at his Upper East Side estate while awaiting trial. The judge found that if Epstein were released, he would continue to abuse teenage girls.
The Bureau of Prisons has never offered a public explanation as to why Epstein was able to take his own life while in government custody.
But an investigation in 2021 by The New York Times, based on thousands of pages of internal Bureau of Prisons records obtained after filing a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the government, found incompetence and sloppiness by some prison officials and a failure to detect hints that Epstein was increasingly despondent.
The clues prompted too little action by jail and bureau officials, who made mistake after mistake leading up to Epstein’s death, the New York Times reported.
Prosecutors later accused two correctional officers of leaving Epstein unmonitored in his cell the night before his suicide as they spent their time surfing the internet and appearing to be asleep.
The government charged the two guards with falsifying jail records to cover up their failure to perform their duties. The guards ultimately entered into deferred prosecution agreements, and the charges have since been dropped.
Epstein was taken to the Metropolitan Correctional Centre on July 6th, 2019, after he was arrested at Teterboro Airport in New Jersey, where he had flown on a private jet from Paris.
Epstein was charged in a federal indictment with recruiting dozens of teenage girls, some as young as 14, to engage in sex acts with him, at his Manhattan mansion and his estate in Palm Beach, Florida, paying each of them hundreds of dollars in cash.
He also paid some of his victims to recruit additional girls, allowing him to “create a vast network of underage victims for him to sexually exploit,” the indictment charged.
The Metropolitan Correctional Centre, a high-security federal jail in lower Manhattan that long was criticised for poor conditions and inhumane treatment of prisoners, has since been closed and its prisoners moved to other institutions. – This article originally appeared in The New York Times.