After being sealed for years, a suicide note purportedly written by Jeffrey Epstein has been made public.
“They investigated me for months — FOUND NOTHING!!!,” the note says.
Being able to decide when to say goodbye is a delight. Watcha wants me to cry uncontrollably!
“NO FUN” is highlighted at the end, followed by “NOT WORTH IT!!!”
The note was discovered after the paedophile financier, who had attempted suicide in July 2019, was discovered with a piece of fabric around his neck.
At the age of 66, Epstein committed suicide within the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City one month later.
The New York Times asked the court to unseal the memo, and it was made public on Wednesday.
Jeffrey Epstein in an undated handout photo released by the New York State Division of Criminal Justice on July 25, 2019
Following the unsuccessful attempt, Epstein’s cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione discovered the message, which ultimately became a part of his own criminal prosecution.
Tartaglione told the publication in an interview that after Epstein was transferred to a different area of the jail, the note was discovered hidden within a graphic novel.
This is a prison mugshot of Tartaglione.
After Epstein asserted that Tartaglione, not himself, was the one who had injured him, he turned it up to his attorneys.
The official investigation into Epstein’s death made no reference to the note.
Inside the Epstein files, a chronology detailing the note’s travel after it was transferred between multiple lawyers was discovered.
Tartaglione’s solicitors were able to authenticate the memo, according to that file, but it doesn’t explain how they did so.
Judge Kenneth Karas enquired about the parties’ opinions regarding the note’s public release.
According to the Times, “there appears to be a strong public interest in the circumstances surrounding Epstein’s death,” according to the US attorney’s office in Manhattan, which charged Tartaglione.
What information concerning Epstein’s relationships and the secrets he left behind do you believe the public should be aware of?
On February 12, 2000, Donald and Melania Trump were photographed at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, with Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
Epstein is shown above outside his New York City residence. The New York Times petitioned the court to unseal the memo, which was made public on Wednesday.
The nature of the late sex offender’s death has come under more scrutiny after the DOJ released over three million records pertaining to him.
The moment prison guards discovered the pedophile’s body was captured on never-before-seen video earlier this year.
On the day of Epstein’s death, at 6:30 a.m., a guard is seen on camera approaching a desk close to his cell.The guard then heads to the cell a few seconds later.
After more than a minute, the guard is seen going back and forth between Epstein’s cell and the security desk, where he is joined by two other people.
After then, the guards can be seen sprinting between the two locations. At 6:39 a.m., Epstein was formally pronounced dead.
This image shows Epstein’s cell when he was discovered dangling from a bunk bed.
Three separate neck fractures were discovered at his post-mortem: one on the left hyoid, one in the right thyroid cartilage, and one on the left.
He was awaiting trial when he passed away, having entered a not guilty plea to charges of conspiracy and sex trafficking in children.
Public conjecture that he was killed as part of a cover-up to shield prominent people who might have been involved in his crimes was stoked by his suicide.
This led to a suspicion that the well-connected financier kept a list of clients to whom trafficked minors were sold.
There have been no US arrests of the financier or the names disclosed in the papers pertaining to him, with the exception of Ghislaine Maxwell, who was given a 20-year prison sentence in June 2022 for her involvement in enticing young girls for her ex-boyfriend Epstein.
Last July, Maxwell met with Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general at the time, to share her knowledge of the Epstein case.
When the talks’ recordings were later made public, they contained no material that could be used against prominent people, including Donald Trump.
Additionally, she refuted the existence of a purported “client list.”