Los Angeles Times

Documents shed light on final days of Jeffrey Epstein in prison

- By Michael Sisak and Michael Balsamo Sisak and Balsamo write for the Associated Press.

NEW YORK — Two weeks before ending his life, Jeffrey Epstein sat in the corner of his Manhattan jail cell with his hands over his ears, desperate to muffle the sound of a toilet that wouldn’t stop running.

Epstein was agitated and unable to sleep, jail officials observed in records newly obtained by the Associated Press. He called himself a “coward” and complained that he was struggling to adapt to life behind bars following his July 2019 arrest on federal sex-traffickin­g and conspiracy charges — his life of luxury reduced to a concrete and steel cage.

The disgraced financier was under psychologi­cal observatio­n at the time for a suicide attempt days earlier that left his neck bruised and scraped. After a 31-hour stint on suicide watch, Epstein insisted he wasn’t suicidal, telling a jail psychologi­st that he had a “wonderful life” and “would be crazy” to end it.

On Aug. 10, 2019, Epstein was dead.

Nearly four years later, the AP has obtained more than 4,000 pages of documents related to Epstein’s death from the federal Bureau of Prisons under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act. They include a detailed psychologi­cal reconstruc­tion of the events leading to Epstein’s suicide, as well as his health history, internal agency reports, emails, memos and other records.

Taken together, the documents obtained Thursday provide the most complete account to date of Epstein’s detention and death, and the chaotic aftermath. The records help to dispel the many conspiracy theories surroundin­g Epstein’s suicide underscori­ng how fundamenta­l failings at the Bureau of Prisons — including severe staffing shortages and employees cutting corners — contribute­d to Epstein’s death.

They shed new light on the federal prison agency’s muddled response after Epstein was found unresponsi­ve in his cell at the nowshutter­ed Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in New York City.

In one email, a prosecutor involved in Epstein’s criminal case complained about a lack of informatio­n from the Bureau of Prisons in the critical hours after his death, writing that it was “frankly unbelievab­le” that the agency was issuing news releases “before telling us basic informatio­n so that we can relay it to his attorneys who can relay it to his family.”

In another email, a highrankin­g Bureau of Prisons official suggested to the agency’s director that reporters must have been paying jail employees for informatio­n about Epstein’s death because they were reporting details of the agency’s failings — a spurious accusation that impugned the ethics of journalist­s and the agency’s own workers.

The documents also provide a fresh window into Epstein’s behavior during his 36 days in jail, including his previously unreported attempt to connect by mail with another high-profile pedophile: Larry Nassar, the U.S. gymnastics team doctor convicted of sexually abusing scores of athletes.

Epstein’s letter to Nassar was found “returned to sender” in the jail’s mail room weeks after Epstein’s death.

“It appeared he mailed it out and it was returned back to him,” the investigat­or who found the letter told a prison official by email. “I am not sure if I should open it or should we hand it over to anyone?”

The letter itself was not included among the documents turned over to the AP.

The night before Epstein’s death, he excused himself from a meeting with his lawyers to make a phone call to his family. According to a memo from a unit manager, Epstein told a jail employee that he was calling his mother, who had been dead for 15 years at that point.

Epstein’s death put intheir creased scrutiny on the Bureau of Prisons and led the agency to close the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in 2021. It spurred an AP investigat­ion that has uncovered deep, previously unreported problems within the agency, the Justice Department’s largest, with more than 30,000 employees, 158,000 inmates and an $8billion annual budget.

An internal memo, undated but sent after Epstein’s death, attributed problems at the jail to “seriously reduced staffing levels, improper or lack of training, and follow up and oversight.” The memo also detailed steps the Bureau of Prisons has taken to remedy lapses Epstein’s suicide exposed, including requiring supervisor­s to review surveillan­ce video to ensure that officers made required cell checks.

Epstein’s lawyer, Martin Weinberg, said people detained at the facility endured “medieval conditions of confinemen­t that no American defendant should have been subjected to.”

“It’s sad, it’s tragic, that it took this kind of event to finally cause the Bureau of Prisons to close this regrettabl­e institutio­n,” Weinberg said in a phone interview.

The workers tasked with guarding Epstein the night he killed himself, Tova Noel and Michael Thomas, were charged with lying on prison records to make it seem as though they had made their required checks before Epstein was found lifeless. Epstein’s cellmate did not return after a court hearing the day before, and prison officials failed to pair another prisoner with him, leaving him alone.

During one two-hour period, both appeared to have been asleep, according to indictment. Noel and Thomas admitted to falsifying the log entries but avoided prison time under a deal with federal prosecutor­s.

Epstein arrived at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center on July 6, 2019. He spent 22 hours in the jail’s general population before officials moved him to the special housing unit “due to the significan­t increase in media coverage and awareness of his notoriety among the inmate population,” according to the psychologi­cal reconstruc­tion of his death.

During an initial health screening, the 66-year-old said that he had more than 10 female sexual partners within the previous five years. Medical records showed he was suffering from sleep apnea, constipati­on, hypertensi­on, lower back pain and pre-diabetes and had been previously treated for chlamydia.

Epstein did make some attempts to adapt to his jailhouse surroundin­gs, the records show. He signed up for a kosher meal and told prison officials, through his lawyer, that he wanted permission to exercise outside.

Epstein’s outlook worsened when a judge denied him bail July 18, 2019 — raising the prospect that he’d remain locked up until trial. If convicted, he faced up to 45 years in prison. Four days later, Epstein was found on the floor of his cell with a strip of bedsheet around his neck.

Epstein survived that suicide attempt.

Epstein expressed frustratio­n with the noise of the jail and his lack of sleep. During his first few weeks at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center, Epstein didn’t have the sleep apnea breathing apparatus that he used. Then, the toilet in his cell started acting up.

The day before Epstein ended his life, a federal judge unsealed about 2,000 pages of documents in a sexual abuse lawsuit against him. That developmen­t, prison officials observed, further eroded Epstein’s previous elevated status.

That fall from grace, a lack of significan­t interperso­nal connection­s and “the idea of potentiall­y spending his life in prison were likely factors contributi­ng to Mr. Epstein’s suicide,” officials wrote.

 ?? Uma Sanghvi Palm Beach Post ?? JEFFERY EPSTEIN, once a high-flying financier, was found dead in his federal prison cell in 2019.
Uma Sanghvi Palm Beach Post JEFFERY EPSTEIN, once a high-flying financier, was found dead in his federal prison cell in 2019.

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