epstein didnt kill himself (Page 1/2)
TheDigitalAlchemist JAN 07, 12:39 AM
https://www.courant.com/201...rnet-isnt-buying-it/
ray b JAN 08, 01:22 PM
WELL IN 11-19

WHO WAS LARGE AND IN CHARGE

OF THE WHOLE FED MESS ?

RUMP

SO RUMP KILLED EPSTEIN

directly no
but it was his watch his job his good people
why is he above all question or critical examination

Teflon don as nothing ever sticks
BingB JAN 08, 06:53 PM
Ghislaine Maxwell just got 20 years in prison.

If there were any "names" that she could have gave up to set her free then she would have sang like Swifty.

Epstein killed himself. It makes zero sense to say they killed him but let Maxwell live and possibly take them all down.
82-T/A [At Work] JAN 08, 08:16 PM
I think it's reasonable to believe that too many coincidences when combined, aren't actually coincidental. The camera on him wasn't working, the person meant to watch him walked away, etc., etc.

There were a lot of people who tried to keep all of this under wraps, especially those mentioned in the various testimony. Many of the people who would have otherwise been charged, were given immunity for their testimony and can therefore never be charged for these crimes. The amount of effort that was undertaken to prevent the redacted names from being added back to the public testimony is titanic. Why these names were even redacted is beyond me. It's pretty clear that there was some impropriety with Prince Andrew... and I only say this because Queen Elizabeth stripped him of his royal duties... which we can assume would only likely happen if he admitted to Queen Elizabeth something that made her decide to take that action. Technically, that would be up to a British court... so whatever.
Valkrie9 JAN 09, 03:18 AM
On the beach with Jeffrey Epstein

See, it was the sneaky switcheroo in the dark of night that has confused all the suckers out there in the world of teeny sex dolls on Lolita Island.
The list of Epstein Clients is a list of the dempartie, doing their diddling on camera, with underaged girls.
Biden_Joe, top of the list, photographed ' in flagrante delicto ', the publication of which will end his occupation of the White House.
We can't have a diddler creep in the Oval Office, right ?
KJP will lie directly to your face, if you were to ask them to tell the truth.
' Is it true, that Biden_Joe has been a frequent visitor to Epstein's Island ? '
' Well, he does like little girls jumping in his lap, that's what flips his dynamo hum, sniffing, prodding and nurging girls in onesy bathing suits, since the '60s. '
Epstein is not dead, his stash of incriminating evidence is his guarantee of life, so they faked it.
The entire island was wired for sound and video, a honeypot sting operation.
' If you whipped it out on Lolita Island, we have it on video ! '
Epstein is likely enjoying the beach scene in Tel Aviv, doing the Zohan.
A trap !
rinselberg JAN 09, 06:02 AM

quote
Originally posted by 82-T/A [At Work]:
I think it's reasonable to believe that too many coincidences when combined, aren't actually coincidental. The camera on him wasn't working, the person meant to watch him walked away, etc., etc.


They're not coincidences. Jeffrey Epstein was able to complete his suicide without interruption because the surveillance camera(s) were not in order, or not being monitored, and because the prison guards that were tasked with monitoring Epstein and protecting Epstein from Epstein sloughed off their responsibilities.


quote
Negligence, misconduct and job performance failures all contributed to the suicide of Jeffrey Epstein, the notorious financier who was jailed for child-sex trafficking charges, while in jail in 2019, according to a new report by the U.S. Justice Department's Office of the Inspector General.

Systemic problems at the Federal Bureau of Prisons as well as several issues at New York's Metropolitan Correctional Center, the jail in which Epstein was incarcerated when he died, contributed to one of the BOP's most high profile inmates taking his own life, the report released Tuesday said.

Severe staffing shortages, failures at managing inmates at risk for suicide, issues with maintaining working security cameras and a "widespread disregard of BOP policies and procedures" were seen in the Epstein case and continues to be endemic throughout the bureau nationwide, the report said. . . .


It's not all that surprising.

"Negligence, staff failures led to Jeffrey Epstein's suicide, a DOJ report says"
Jaclyn Diaz for NPR; June 27, 2023.
https://www.npr.org/2023/06...n-suicide-department

[This message has been edited by rinselberg (edited 01-09-2024).]

82-T/A [At Work] JAN 09, 08:19 AM

quote
Originally posted by rinselberg:
They're not coincidences. Jeffrey Epstein was able to complete his suicide without interruption because the surveillance camera(s) were not in order, or not being monitored, and because the prison guards that were tasked with monitoring Epstein and protecting Epstein from Epstein sloughed off their responsibilities.




I'm not saying it's for certain, I'm simply saying it's my belief. In my prior line of work, which I won't get into, coincidences are the unfortunate forensic "leave behinds" after a successful operation. The Epstein case was exceptionally high-profile. Under any other circumstance, I might believe it was simply coincidental; however, with Epstein... there was no room for error. He is single-handedly the person who would likely have been able to incriminate everyone else. Sometimes... you have to use Occam's Razor (as the Millennials say) to determine what's very likely obvious.

You have the most powerful people in the world... many of whom allegedly could have been ruined through Epstein's testimony. It's irrational for you to assume they got to power illicitly (in some cases), but then wouldn't use anything in their power to stop the one person that could bring them down.
rinselberg JAN 09, 08:34 AM

quote
In 2019, 340 state and federal prisoners died by suicide. Similar to local jails, suicides were more likely to occur in large state and federal prison facilities. About 45% of state and federal prisons that held 2,500 or more prisoners at midyear 2019 reported one or more suicides.

In 2019, suicides occurred in 217 state and federal prisons, 19% of all prison facilities.


"Suicide in Local Jails and State and Federal Prisons, 2000 to 2019—Statistical Tables"
E. Ann Carson, Bureau of Justice Statistics; U.S. Department of Justice; October 2021.
https://bjs.ojp.gov/sites/g...ent/sljsfp0019st.pdf

Jeffrey Epstein's suicide in prison is only four years beyond 2019.


"Connect the dots."

[This message has been edited by rinselberg (edited 01-09-2024).]

82-T/A [At Work] JAN 09, 09:00 AM

quote
Originally posted by rinselberg:

"Suicide in Local Jails and State and Federal Prisons, 2000 to 2019—Statistical Tables"
E. Ann Carson, Bureau of Justice Statistics; U.S. Department of Justice; October 2021.
https://bjs.ojp.gov/sites/g...ent/sljsfp0019st.pdf

Jeffrey Epstein's suicide in prison is only four years beyond 2019.


"Connect the dots."




Yes, however, he was on "suicide watch," which has a very detailed process for preventing suicide, which includes everything from 24/7 monitoring, to elimination of anything that he might be able to use to kill himself... which included the type of bed sheets he had in his room (which were not supposed to be there). They gave him EXTRA bed sheets, a cell phone, and he even made changes to his will a day before. None of which would have been allowed under suicide watch, especially the extra bed sheets.

https://www.morningstar.com...-changes-to-his-will
rinselberg JAN 09, 11:47 AM

quote
No, Jeffrey Epstein wasn’t murdered in federal prison in 2019, despite the many conspiracy theories circulating about his death; he killed himself. That was one clear conclusion from the long-awaited investigative report released recently by the inspector general for the Justice Department.

But the report cited gross negligence in the days leading up to his death that enabled Epstein, a financier facing charges of sex trafficking, to take his own life. There is no record that his cell had ever been inspected, and he was able to hoard an “excessive amount” of bedsheets—even after he was previously found with a torn strip of cloth wrapped around his neck. In violation of policy, he was allowed to make an unmonitored and unrecorded phone call. Finally, despite warnings that he was displaying suicidal tendencies and needed a cellmate, Epstein was left alone in his cell, unchecked, for several hours before his suicide—even though the officer in charge had ordered staff to check on him every 30 minutes.

The report calls for a list of reforms—hiring more staff, tightening cell search procedures, fixing security cameras, assigning cellmates to inmates who have been on suicide watch. This list doesn’t go far enough.

It doesn’t address the inhumane conditions of special housing units, where Epstein spent the bulk of his time. Inmates housed in these units are confined to their cells for 23 hours a day and have limited human interaction. Though the term “special housing unit” is commonly used interchangeably with “solitary confinement,” inmates are often not alone—generally, federal prisoners in them have a cellmate. That’s because of overcrowding; two inmates are squeezed into a cell made for one.

The inspector general reported special housing units enable prison staff to ensure inmates are “secure in their cells and in good health.” But being cooped up in a tiny, bare cell with another person for 23 hours a day is not conducive to good health. Solitary confinement is torture: Inmates subjected to this punishment are more likely to suffer from psychosis, depression and suicidal thoughts. Being forced to eat, sleep and defecate in front of another prisoner can intensify these effects, as well as increase the risk of inmate-on-inmate violence. For that, it is not a step up from solitary—for some, double-celled solitary is worse.

Even when prisoners are discovered to be experiencing suicidal ideation, they are not treated much better. Suicide watch is a lesser-acknowledged evil of the prison system. Epstein was placed on suicide watch, but only for one day. Inmates on suicide watch wear rough, tear-resistant smocks and are isolated in harm-proof cells. These cells are even more barren than those in special housing units; they don’t have bedsheets, books, showers or, oftentimes, toilet paper. The lights remain on at all times.

Unsurprisingly, these restrictive conditions have been found to make inmates more suicidal. Some will conceal their suicidal tendencies to avoid or be removed from this environment. Instead of receiving life-affirming therapy, prisoners struggling with suicidal ideation are treated like radioactive liabilities—locked away while unmitigated misery reflects off the blank walls back at them. Both solitary confinement and the current design of suicide watch deserve no place in a country with a constitutional amendment banning cruel and unusual punishment.

Epstein’s death in prison elicited little sympathy from the public; he had been allowed to sexually abuse teenage girls for decades with impunity because of his immense wealth and connections. But the government has too often fallen short of its responsibility to ensure the physical and mental well-being of all inmates. We are reminded of this with the recent prison stabbing of disgraced sports doctor Larry Nassar (who is in stable condition) and apparent suicide of “Unabomber” Ted Kaczynski. Regardless of the offense, any unnatural death in custody is a failure of the prison system.


"Jeffrey Epstein’s suicide reveals grave failures of U.S. prisons"
The Editorial Board of the Washington Post; July 10, 2023.
https://www.washingtonpost....eral-prison-failure/

[This message has been edited by rinselberg (edited 01-09-2024).]