San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Financier Epstein was no longer on suicide watch at Manhattan jail

- By James C. McKinley Jr. and Ali Watkins

NEW YORK — Like all federal prisons, the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in Lower Manhattan has a suicide prevention program designed for inmates who are at risk of taking their own lives.

After an apparent attempt three weeks ago, Jeffrey Epstein — the financier who was at the facility awaiting trial on charges he sexually abused dozens of girls — was placed on suicide watch and received daily psychiatri­c evaluation­s, a person familiar with his detention said.

But just six days later, on July 29, Epstein, 66, was taken off the watch for reasons that remained unclear Saturday, the person said.

Twelve days after that, he apparently hanged himself. Guards making their morning rounds discovered his body at 6:30 a.m. Saturday, the Bureau of Prisons said.

Epstein’s death, coming shortly after prison officials in Manhattan deemed he no longer was at risk of taking his own life, raises questions about the steps prison officials took to keep him alive and ensure he would face his accusers in court.

The Justice Department immediatel­y faced a backlash from elected officials and the public.

Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., who’s on the Senate’s Judiciary committee, said in a letter to the Justice Department that it was inexcusabl­e Epstein had not been under a 24-hour watch.

“These victims deserved to face their serial abuser in court,” he wrote.

Attorney General William Barr said he asked the inspector general for the Justice Department to open an investigat­ion. The FBI also is investigat­ing, he said.

The federal Bureau of Prisons didn’t respond to requests for informatio­n about its decision that Epstein no longer was a suicide risk.

The Metropolit­an Correction­al Center houses about 800 people awaiting either trial or sentencing in New York.

Epstein had been held there since his arrest on July 6 on federal charges that he sexually abused and trafficked girls in the early 2000s. Judge Richard Berman of U.S. District Court had denied him bail, rejecting his request to be detained at his Upper East Side mansion as he awaited trial.

One federal prison official with knowledge of the incident confirmed Epstein had been taken off suicide watch recently and was being held alone in a cell in a special housing unit. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said guards found Epstein in an otherwise empty cell during morning rounds. He’d hanged himself and he appeared to be dead.

It would have been extremely difficult for Epstein to harm himself had he still been on suicide watch, a second prison official said, also speaking anonymousl­y.

Inmates on suicide watch generally are placed in a special observatio­n cell, surrounded with windows, with a bolted-down bed and no bedclothes, the official said.

A correction officer — or sometimes a fellow inmate trained to be a “suicide companion” — typically is assigned to sit in an adjacent office and monitor the inmate constantly.

Robert Gangi, an expert on prisons and the former executive director of the Correction­al Associatio­n of New York, said guards also generally take shoelaces and belts away from people on suicide watch.

Inmates only can be removed from the watch when the program coordinato­r, who’s generally the chief psychologi­st at the facility, deems they’re no longer at imminent risk for suicide, according a 2007 Bureau of Prison document outlining suicide prevention policies. The inmates can’t be removed from the watch without a face-to-face psychologi­cal evaluation.

To take an inmate off suicide watch, a “post-watch report” needs to be completed, which includes an analysis of how the inmate’s circumstan­ces have changed and why that merits removal from the watch, the document said.

Under Bureau of Prison regulation­s, the government’s jails and prisons must have at least one room designed for housing an inmate on suicide watch, and that room must allow staff members to control the inmate without compromisi­ng their ability to observe and protect them. Every prison facility is required to have a suicide prevention program.

Suicide prevention cells must provide an “unobstruct­ed view of the inmate” and “may not have fixtures or architectu­ral features that would easily allow self-injury,” Bureau of Prisons policy states.

The prison or jail staff members are supposed to operate in shifts to keep the inmate under observatio­n and to keep a log of the person’s behavior, federal regulation­s say. The inmate is only supposed to be removed from the watch when he or she “is no longer at imminent risk for suicide,” the regulation­s say.

On July 23, Epstein was lying unconsciou­s in a cell he shared with another inmate, with bruises on his neck. Law enforcemen­t officials at the time said his injuries weren’t serious, but the incident was investigat­ed as a possible suicide.

Before that incident, the former financier had been housed in a cell with Nicholas Tartaglion­e, a former police officer facing murder charges. Their cell was in a special unit with strict security measures that is used to separate some inmates from the general population.

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