EFTA00018870.pdf
efta-20251231-dataset-8 Court Filing 173.2 KB • Feb 13, 2026
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Subject: Investigators scrutinizing video outside Epstein's cell find some footage unusable, according to
people familiar with the inquiry
Date: The, 27 Aug 2019 17:54:36 +0000
Investigators scrutinizing video outside Epstein's cell find some footage unusable, according to people
familiar with the inquiry
Washington Post
By Carol D. Leonnig and Matt Zapotosky
8/26/19
At least one camera in the hallway outside the cell where authorities say registered sex offender Jeffrey Epstein
hanged himself earlier this month had footage that is unusable, although other, clearer footage was captured in
the area, according to three people briefed on the evidence gathered earlier this month.
It was not immediately clear why some video footage outside Epstein's cell is too flawed for investigators to use
or what is visible in the usable footage. The incident is being investigated by the FBI and the Justice
Department's inspector general's office, which are attempting to determine what happened and how to assess
whether any policies were violated or crimes committed.
The footage is considered critical to those inquiries, and the revelation of an unusable recording is yet another of
the apparent failures inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center, the short-staffed Bureau of Prisons facility in
downtown Manhattan that held Epstein.
It's unclear whether the flaw in the taping affected a limited duration of the footage or whether it was a chronic
problem in the beleaguered Manhattan facility.
A Bureau of Prisons spokesman declined to comment, as did spokespeople for the FBI, the Justice Department
and the U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan.
The people who spoke about the footage did so on the condition of anonymity, citing the ongoing probe.
Epstein, a well-connected financier, had been charged in early July with sexually abusing dozens of young girls
in the early 2000s and ordered held without bond. The arrest brought a sense of long-awaited justice to those
who alleged Epstein abused them and who had earlier been dismayed by a 2008 plea deal he received to resolve
similar allegations that was widely criticized as too lenient.
That deal allowed Epstein to plead guilty to two state charges and spend just 13 months in jail, with work release
privileges. The new charges could have resulted in a prison term of as much as 45 years.
But on Aug. 10, the 66-year-old was found hanging in his cell. He was taken to a hospital, where he was later
pronounced dead. His death was ruled a suicide.
Prosecutors have since moved to drop the charges against Epstein — although they continue to investigate those
who might have conspired with him. A federal judge has scheduled a hearing for Tuesday to consider the matter
and has indicated that those who say Epstein victimized them will be allowed to speak in court.
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Meanwhile, there has been intense scrutiny of the federal facility where he was held, which did not follow its
protocol in the handling of Epstein in several ways, officials have said.
Epstein should have been checked on every 30 minutes in the jail's special housing unit, though it had been
several hours since the last check when he was discovered as staff members delivered breakfast. Investigators are
exploring whether logs were falsified to indicate checks had occurred when they had not, a person familiar with
the matter said.
The two officers on duty when Epstein apparently hanged himself were both working overtime — one forced,
the other voluntarily, officials have said. One did not normally work as a corrections officer, though he had in the
past and was allowed to do so, officials have said.
Epstein also was supposed to have a roommate, following a July 23 incident in which he was found on the floor
of his cell with marks on his neck. Authorities suspected he had attempted suicide; Epstein said he believed he
had been attacked.
He was placed on suicide watch for about a week after that — meaning he was monitored 24-7. He was placed
back in the jail's special housing unit late in the month and, for a time, had a new roommate.
But that person was transferred the day before Epstein's death, and a new roommate was not assigned — despite
the fact that at least eight jail officials knew Epstein was not to be left alone in his cell.
New York's chief medical examiner, Barbara Sampson, ruled Epstein's cause of death a suicide on Aug. 16. The
ruling came five days after the medical examiner's office conducted an autopsy and classified the cause of death
as pending while seeking additional information.
The pathologist's autopsy found Epstein suffered fractures in his neck bones, according to two people familiar
with the findings. Among the breaks in Epstein's neck was the hyoid bone, which in men is near the Adam's
apple. Such breaks can occur in those who hang themselves, according to forensics experts and studies on the
subject. But they are typical in victims of homicide by strangulation, experts told The Post. Experts also caution
that such a break must be viewed in the context of the findings of a full autopsy to draw a conclusion about a
cause of death.
The hyoid bone becomes more brittle and is easier to break as people age. Epstein was 66.
Law enforcement officials have said they believe Epstein killed himself.
Lawyers for Epstein and his family had questioned Sampson's ruling of suicide and the thoroughness of the
investigation into Epstein's death.
"The defense team fully intends to conduct its own independent and complete investigation into the
circumstances and cause of Mr. Epstein's death including if necessary legal action to view the pivotal videos —
if they exist as they should — of the area proximate to Mr. Epstein's cell during the time period leading to his
death," the lawyers said in an Aug. 16 statement. "We are not satisfied with the conclusions of the medical
examiner."
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