Baltimore Sun

Video of Epstein’s cell during suicide try was destroyed, feds say

- By Stephen Rex Brown

NEW YORK — Surveillan­ce footage from outside Jeffrey Epstein’s cell during his suicide attempt was destroyed, prosecutor­s revealed Thursday.

The revelation in a letter filed by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Maurene Comey and Jason Swergold is the latest disclosure from the federal government about the footage from the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center on

July 22 and 23. Epstein attempted to hang himself that night while sharing a cell with quadruple-slaying suspect Nick Tartaglion­e, officials have said.

Swergold initially said last month in White Plains, New York, federal court that the video had not been preserved. He reversed himself less than 24 hours later, saying it had been archived.

Now, prosecutor­s say that due to a record-keeping error, MCC staff preserved footage from outside the wrong cell.

“The footage contained on the preserved video was for the correct date and time, but captured a different tier than the one where Cell-1 was located because the preserved video did not show correction­s officers responding to any of the cells seen on the video. After speaking with MCC legal counsel, the government was informed that the MCC computer system listed a different, incorrect cell for Tartaglion­e,” prosecutor­s wrote in a letter filed in federal court in Manhattan.

There was a backup system for the video footage, but that wasn’t working either.

“The requested video no longer exists on the backup system and has not since at least August 2019 as a result of technical errors,” the prosecutor­s wrote.

Bruce Barket, Tartaglion­e’s attorney, had asked MCC to preserve the video days after the incident. He has said Tartaglion­e acted “admirably,” possibly saving Epstein’s life. Correction­al officers found Epstein dead in a different cell at the jail on Aug. 10. He’d hanged himself in the cell, which he occupied alone.

“It is stunning that a video which we asked to be preserved and which the jail should have saved without a request was destroyed. More troubling are the various and inconsiste­nt accounts of what happened to the video,” Barket wrote in a text.

Tartaglion­e, a former Briarcliff Manor, New York, cop, is facing the death penalty for four slayings that prosecutor­s allege were linked to a drug deal gone bad with a Mexican cartel. The footage could potentiall­y be useful to Barket if he must argue to a jury Tartaglion­e does not deserve the death penalty.

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