NEW TOP-SECRET PRISON PAPERS PROVE EPSTEIN WAS MURDERED
Accused madam Maxwell’s nightmare has come TRUE
CAGED socialite Ghislaine Maxwell is convinced her pervert boss, billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, was murdered in his Manhattan jail cell — and an explosive top-secret prison dossier obtained by GLOBE proves she’s right!
As Maxwell, 60, fights for her own life against child sex trafficking charges in a federal court, GLOBE reveals secret government documents show pedophile Epstein repeatedly rejected the notion of suicide while imprisoned in New York’s Metropolitan Correctional Center — and even told shrinks “being alive is fun.”
But 36 days after his arrest for child sex trafficking, the 66-year-old money man was found hanging in his cell on Aug. 10, 2019, under suspicious circumstances that included broken security cameras and no routine cell checks by prison guards ordered to perform the task.
Epstein’s death was ruled a suicide, but many — including an acclaimed coroner and his accused madam Maxwell — believe the death scene was staged.
Some investigators contend the blackmailing sex fiend was killed to protect powerful people linked to his harem of teen sex slaves.
Says Ghislaine’s big brother Ian Maxwell, 65, “I would venture to think she also thinks Epstein was murdered.”
Forensic psychiatrist Dr. Carole Lieberman doesn’t think Ghislaine is far off the mark, concluding: “The way things unfolded during Epstein’s last hours are very suspicious of foul play made to look like suicide.”
Greenwich, Conn.–based psychologist Dr. Holly
Schiff also notes,
“His behavior and verbalizations in the weeks leading up to his death are not suggestive of someone who is suicidal.”
A newly obtained 2,000page federal Bureau of Prisons record detailing Epstein’s jail stay shows the sicko chatted about physics, mathematics and investments, and was eager to make friends with those around him.
“He was future-oriented,” a shrink wrote when deciding Epstein did not need to be put on suicide watch.
An inmate also claimed he talked with Epstein until the wee hours of the morning about “prison life and etiquette,” while another wrote, “Epstein wants to know who’s the best cook on 11 North.”
At one point, the wealthy perv, who faced 45 years behind bars if convicted, blurted out: “It would be crazy to take my life.”
During a July 9 suicide risk assessment, a psychologist noted Epstein “adamantly
denied having any suicidal ideation, intention or plan.”
Two days later, another psychologist wrote: “He was smirking and said, ‘Why would you ever think I would be suicidal? I am not suicidal and I would never be.’”
While lawmen claim Epstein made a failed suicide attempt on July 23, he later repeatedly denied having suicidal thoughts, saying taking his own life would violate his Jewish religious beliefs. He appeared cheerful and told jokes, records show.
“I’m a coward,” he told a prison psychologist, further explaining why he wouldn’t commit suicide.
On the night he died, Epstein made a 15-minute call from a prison phone to his 30-yearold girlfriend Karyna Shuliak and did not mention suicide, according to records and sources.
The official 15-page Bureau of Prisons psychological report on his death blamed his suicide on a “lack of significant interpersonal connections, a complete loss of his status in both the community and among associates, and the idea of potentially spending his life in prison.”
But as GLOBE reported, his family, a top medical expert and many investigators are convinced Epstein was murdered because he knew too much about the powerful men who used his private jet, a flying bordello dubbed the Lolita Express, or visited his spy cam–filled mansions, where underage girls engaged in orgies.
Epstein’s associates include former President Bill Clinton, Britain’s Prince Andrew, computer software tycoon Bill Gates, prominent lawyers, businessmen and Hollywood A-listers.
All insist they know nothing about high-flying Epstein’s perversions — even though he got a slap-on-the-wrist plea deal for sex with a 14-year-old girl in Florida. Lawmen say he preyed on at least 36 young women — mostly minors — with Maxwell’s help. She has denied the charges.
Meanwhile, Schiff adds suicidal patients “typically display a significant sense of hopelessness and disinterest in life, the future and those around them, which causes them to socially withdraw and isolate.
“None of this was true of Epstein.”