The Mercury News

Two Epstein jail guards turn down a plea deal

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WASHINGTON >> Federal prosecutor­s offered a plea deal to two correction­al officers responsibl­e for guarding Jeffrey Epstein on the night of his death, but the officers have declined the offer, people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press.

The existence of the plea offer signals the Justice Department is considerin­g criminal charges in connection with the wealthy financier’s death at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in New York in August. The city’s medical examiner ruled Epstein’s death a suicide.

The guards on Epstein’s unit are suspected of failing to check on him every half-hour, as required, and of fabricatin­g log entries to show they had. As part of the proposed plea deal, prosecutor­s wanted the guards to admit they falsified the prison records, according to the people familiar with the matter. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not permitted to publicly discuss the investigat­ion.

The U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan had no comment on the plea offer.

Both guards were working overtime because of staffing shortages. They have been placed on administra­tive leave while the FBI and the Justice Department’s inspector general investigat­e the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Epstein’s death. The 66-year-old had been awaiting trial on charges of sexually abusing teenage girls.

Epstein was placed on suicide watch after he was found on his cell floor July 23 with bruises on his neck. Multiple people familiar with operations at the jail have said Epstein was then taken off suicide watch about a week before his death.

Epstein’s death exposed mounting evidence that the chronicall­y understaff­ed Metropolit­an Correction­al Center may have bungled its responsibi­lity to keep him alive. Guards often work overtime day after day, and other employees are pressed into service as correction­al officers.

Falsificat­ion of records has been a problem throughout the federal prison system. Kathleen Hawk Sawyer, who was named director of the Bureau of Prisons after Epstein’s death, disclosed in a Nov. 4 internal memo that a review of operations across the agency found some staff members failed to perform required rounds and inmate counts but logged that they had done so anyway.

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