Orlando Sentinel

2 jail workers charged with falsifying checks on Epstein

- By Devlin Barrett

WASHINGTON — Federal prosecutor­s filed criminal charges Tuesday against two jail staffers who allegedly failed to check on multimilli­onaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein in his cell on the night he hanged himself, in an indictment that also sought to tamp down the burgeoning conspiracy theories about his death.

A grand jury charged Tova Noel and Michael Thomas of six separate crimes during their work at the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center, accusing them of repeatedly signing false documents to say they conducted regular checks Aug. 10 on Epstein and inmates.

Epstein was found hanging in his cell early that morning, and the city’s medical examiner ruled his death a suicide.

For “substantia­l portions of their shifts, Noel and Thomas sat at their desk, browsed the internet and moved around the common area” of the section of the jail where Epstein was held, known as the Special Housing Unit, or SHU, the grand jury charged.

The indictment charges that Noel and Thomas repeatedly signed false “count slips” even though they failed to conduct the required counts at midnight, 3 a.m. and 5 a.m. They also failed to conduct more frequent checks on Epstein, which had been ordered by higher-ups at the jail, according to the indictment.

The document repeatedly notes that its charges are based on “video from the MCC’s internal video surveillan­ce system.”

On the night of Epstein’s death, the two jail workers “were seated at the correction­al officers’ desk ... approximat­ely 15 feet from Epstein’s cell,” the indictment says. “For a period of approximat­ely two hours, Noel and Thomas sat at their desk without moving, and appeared to have been asleep.”

At another point, Noel allegedly used the computer at the desk to “search the internet for furniture sales and benefit websites. Thomas used the computer briefly ... to search for motorcycle sales and sports news,” the indictment says.

The medical examiner’s finding of suicide has been challenged by a private pathologis­t hired by Epstein’s brother, who has claimed that evidence points to homicide not suicide.

The grand jury document seeks to dispel the notion that someone sneaked into Epstein’s cell in the middle of the night when all of his fellow inmates were locked away in their cells.

“Aside from those two officers, as confirmed by video surveillan­ce, no one else entered the SHU, no one conducted any counts or rounds throughout the night, and no one entered the tier in which Epstein was housed,” the indictment says.

Noel and Thomas didn’t notice anything amiss until they began serving breakfast aout 6:30 a.m., the indictment says. When a supervisor responded to their alarm, Noel allegedly said “we did not complete the 3 a.m. nor 5 a.m. rounds.”

At the time of his death, Epstein was being held at the jail while he awaited trial on sex traffickin­g charges that could have led to decades in prison. He had pleaded not guilty.

The death of the most high-profile defendant in the federal prison system led to a major shake-up at the Bureau of Prisons.

Attorney General William Barr brought in a former director of the agency to run it again and replaced the top official at the MCC, saying the preliminar­y investigat­ion had found “serious irregulari­ties at the center.”

The two staffers were placed on leave shortly after Epstein’s death; they were arrested Tuesday.

A lawyer for Thomas, Montell Figgins, said both guards are being “scapegoate­d.”

“We feel this is a rush to judgment by the U.S. attorney’s office,” he said. “They’re going after the low man on the totem pole here.”

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER/AP ?? The Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in New York, where Jeffrey Epstein was found hanging in his jail cell Aug. 10.
MARY ALTAFFER/AP The Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in New York, where Jeffrey Epstein was found hanging in his jail cell Aug. 10.
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Epstein

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