The Commercial Appeal

Warden at Epstein jail quietly retires amid probe

- Michael Balsamo and Michael R. Sisak

WASHINGTON – The warden who ran the federal jail where disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein killed himself was allowed to quietly retire from the Bureau of Prisons in February. His retirement came in the midst of an investigat­ion examining how one of the government’s highest profile inmates could take his own life in custody.

Lamine N’diaye retired from the Bureau of Prisons on Feb. 26, agency spokespers­on Kristie Breshears told The Associated Press on Tuesday. He was most recently the warden at FCI Fort Dix, a low-security prison in Burlington County, New Jersey.

He had been put in that position despite the ongoing federal probe and in direct contradict­ion of a public pronouncem­ent from the Bureau of Prisons that it would delay N’diaye’s transfer to run any prison until the inquiry by the Justice Department’s inspector general was finished.

FCI Fort Dix, located on the grounds of the joint military base Mcguire-dixlakehur­st, is the largest single federal prison by population, with just under 3,000 inmates.

Under N’diaye’s watch as warden, an inmate at Fort Dix was stabbed in the eyeball by a fellow prisoner, exemplifyi­ng the gruesome chronic violence that plagues the Bureau of Prisons and quickly added to calls from congressio­nal lawmakers for the Bureau of Prisons Director Michael Carvajal to resign from his position. Carvajal announced in January he was resigning but has remained in place while the Justice Department searches for a replacemen­t.

A handful of inmates – some of whom were believed to be friends and associates of the suspected attacker – have been held in segregated housing units for more than four months and some were threatened with transfers if they didn’t cooperate with the investigat­ion into the stabbing, two people familiar with the matter told The AP. The people could not discuss the matter publicly and spoke to AP on condition of anonymity.

N’diaye was previously the warden at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center, the now-closed federal lockup in Manhattan. He was removed from that position after Epstein killed himself at the jail in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

Prosecutor­s say the guards who were supposed to be monitoring Epstein were instead sleeping and browsing the internet. The Bureau of Prisons closed the jail in October for muchneeded repairs after years of decay, though it may never reopen.

The Bureau of Prisons named N’diaye as warden at Fort Dix in February 2021 despite an ongoing federal investigat­ion into lapses that led to Epstein’s death and in contradict­ion of its pronouncem­ent that the agency would delay any move until the inquiry was finished.

The bureau attempted to place N’diaye in the Fort Dix job a year earlier, but the move was stopped by then-attorney General William Barr.

The Justice Department’s inspector general has yet to complete the investigat­ion. A spokespers­on for Inspector General Michael Horowitz said Tuesday that the probe was still ongoing.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP FILE ?? The warden who ran the now-closed Metropolit­an Correction­al Center, where financier Jeffrey Epstein died, quietly retired in February in the midst of a federal investigat­ion.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP FILE The warden who ran the now-closed Metropolit­an Correction­al Center, where financier Jeffrey Epstein died, quietly retired in February in the midst of a federal investigat­ion.

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