The Day

Probe into Epstein’s death widens

A big question: Why wasn’t he monitored more closely in jail?

- By MATT ZAPOTOSKY and DEVLIN BARRETT

The two correction­al officers assigned to watch the special unit in the detention center where financier and sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was being housed when he apparently hanged himself Saturday were working overtime — one forced to do so by management, the other for his fourth or fifth consecutiv­e day, the president of the local union for jail staffers said Sunday.

The assertion came as investigat­ors continued to explore the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Epstein’s death. New York City’s chief medical examiner, Barbara Sampson, said her office conducted an autopsy of Epstein’s body Sunday but had not yet reached a determinat­ion on cause of death “pending further informatio­n.” The medical examiner also allowed a private pathologis­t, Michael Baden, to observe the autopsy examinatio­n at the request of Epstein’s representa­tives, Sampson said.

Serene Gregg, president of the American Federation of Government Employees Local 3148, said the Metropolit­an Correction­al Center in Manhattan is functionin­g with less than 70 percent of the needed correction­al officers, forcing many to work mandatory overtime and 60- or 70-hour workweeks.

She said one of the individual­s assigned to watch Epstein’s unit did not normally work as a correction­al officer but, like others in roles such as counselors and teachers, was able to do so. She declined to say which one or specify the person’s regular role.

“If it wasn’t Mr. Epstein, it would have been somebody else, because of the conditions at that institutio­n,” Gregg said. “It wasn’t a matter of how it happened or it happening, but it was only a matter of time for it to

happen. It was inevitable. Our staff is severely overworked.”

Gregg’s comments are sure to increase scrutiny of the Bureau of Prisons and the Metropolit­an Correction Center, the high-rise detention center in Manhattan where Epstein, 66, was found hanging in his cell Saturday while he was awaiting trial on federal allegation­s that he sexually abused dozens of young girls in the early 2000s. After being found, he was taken to a hospital and was pronounced dead.

The death, which authoritie­s had classified initially as an “apparent suicide,” triggered multiple investigat­ions into how such a high-profile inmate, who had previously been placed on suicide watch, could have died in federal custody. It also sparked outrage among his victims and their representa­tives, who had hoped that Epstein’s trial next year would finally produce the justice they felt Epstein had long evaded.

Gregg said she did not know details of the investigat­ion into Epstein’s death and declined to detail her discussion­s with those working that night. But she said she has long complained about understaff­ing at the facility, telling superiors, “It’s only a matter of time before we have a loss of life.” And in Epstein’s case, she said, it was possible overwork of officers played a role.

“It’s daunting, mentally, physically. I would feel confident in saying that some of that contribute­d to the unfortunat­e death of inmate Epstein,” she said, clarifying later that she did not know with certainty whether workload played a role in the incident because she was not privy to details of the investigat­ion.

A spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons did not respond to a request for comment on Gregg’s assertions.

On Sunday, amid inquiries by the FBI, Justice Department inspector general and New York City medical examiner, there remained more questions than answers.

“It’s our practice not to comment on ongoing investigat­ions,” said John Lavinsky, a spokesman for the Justice Department inspector general.

Not on suicide watch

Epstein was not on suicide watch Saturday before he was found, but he was held in the detention center’s special housing unit — which, according to union officials, meant he should have been checked on every 30 minutes. It was unclear whether that procedure was followed, and exactly when personnel last checked on Epstein. Gregg declined to comment on internal security procedures.

It was also not clear how much, if any, of the hanging or authoritie­s’ check-ins was captured on camera. E.O. Young, the national president of the Council of Prison Locals C-33, said that while cameras are prevalent in the facility, he did not believe they generally captured inmates’ cells.

The Bureau of Prisons said Saturday that lifesaving measures were “initiated immediatel­y” after Epstein was found, and then emergency responders were summoned. A spokesman did not respond to questions about the case Sunday. A Justice Department spokeswoma­n declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigat­ions.

Epstein had been placed on suicide watch after a July 23 incident in which he was found in his cell with marks on his neck — which subjected him to near constant monitoring and daily psychologi­cal evaluation­s, according to people familiar with the case. But he was taken off that about a week later and brought to the special housing unit, where there was a higher level of security, but not constant monitoring.

Before the incident, Epstein had a cellmate: Nicholas Tartaglion­e, a former police officer in custody on murder and narcotics charges. But Young, the national union president, said Epstein was in a cell alone immediatel­y before his death.

Young said he was not certain why Epstein was in the cell alone, as the Bureau of Prisons has moved recently to make sure fewer inmates are housed on their own. He said there was some speculatio­n after the July 23 incident that Epstein was trying to get away from Tartaglion­e, whom he feared, and he believed that — at least for a time — Epstein had another cellmate after coming off suicide watch.

Young asserted that in the facility’s general population, Epstein also probably would have been a target, and that there was only so much officers could do to prevent him from harming himself.

But Young said, even in Epstein’s case, correction­al officers face a grim reality.

“We can’t ever stop anyone who is persistent on killing themselves,” Young said. “The only thing the bureau can do is delay that.”

Young said he and other officials had long been raising concerns as the Trump administra­tion had imposed a hiring freeze and budget cuts on the Bureau of Prisons.

“All this was caused by the administra­tion,” Young said.

Spokesmen for the White House did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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