Jeffrey Epstein's Suspected Suicide Letter - That's what it contains

A US federal judge has ordered the publication of a document allegedly to be Jeffrey Epstein's suicide letter written about a month before his death in prison in 2019.
The document, declassified Wednesday, contains several hand-written lines, where the author claims a several-month investigation against him “had found nothing “, while adding that “is a privilege to choose the time to say goodbye to”.
The note was made public after a federal judge Kenneth M. Karas, who argued that public interest and transparency in justice management justify publishing the document.
The letter came to light under criminal proceedings against Epstein's former cellmate, Nicholas Tartagleone, sentenced for four murders. According to Tartaglione, he had found the document hidden within a book after Epstein had earlier attempted to end his life in July 2019.
However, the authenticity of the document has not been officially confirmed and American authorities have not commented on its contents.
Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his cell in August 2019, while awaiting trial on grave charges of sexual trafficking. His death was officially classified as suicide, but circumstances have fueled theories and speculation for years due to security failures in prison that night.












