Shanghai Daily

Probe into Epstein’s ‘suicide’ in US prison

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US financier Jeffrey Epstein, awaiting trial on charges he trafficked underage girls for sex, was found dead in jail on Saturday of an apparent suicide, triggering outcry over how the high-profile detainee could die in custody.

The government and FBI immediatel­y launched probes as politician­s, law enforcemen­t officials and alleged victims expressed shock that Epstein could take his own life, when a recent reported suicide attempt meant he should have been under close watch.

Epstein, a convicted pedophile who befriended numerous politician­s and celebritie­s over the years, was found unresponsi­ve in his cell around 6:30am at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in New York from “an apparent suicide,” the US Department of Justice said. He was pronounced dead at a hospital.

US Attorney General Bill Barr said he was “appalled” and instructed the Justice Department’s inspector general to probe the circumstan­ces.

“Mr Epstein’s death raises serious questions that must be answered,” Barr said.

The FBI is also investigat­ing, the Justice Department said.

The New York Times and other media reported Epstein hanged himself. The city medical examiner’s office did not confirm the cause of death.

On July 23, the 66-year-old was found unconsciou­s with marks on his neck. He was put on suicide watch for six days before being returned to his cell in a high-security part of the jail, the New York Times reported.

His death came one day after a New York court released a tranche of sealed legal documents, providing new details about what prosecutor­s allege was Epstein’s sex-traffickin­g operation.

Epstein last appeared in court on July 31 when a judge told him that his trial wouldn’t begin before next June.

The wealthy hedge fund manager had been charged with one count of sex traffickin­g of minors and one count of conspiracy to commit sex traffickin­g of minors. Epstein, who denied the charges, had faced up to 45 years in prison — effectivel­y the rest of his life — if convicted.

The Metropolit­an Correction­al Center, a federal facility in Manhattan that often houses suspects awaiting or during trial, is considered one of the most secure penal establishm­ents in the US.

Infamous Mexican drug trafficker Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman spent more than two years there as an inmate.

(AFP)

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