Is Jeffrey Epstein’s suicide note real? Experts compare it to his past writings

Is Jeffrey Epstein’s suicide note real? Experts compare it to his past writings

A federal judge has made public the handwritten note allegedly written by Jeffrey Epstein.

The so-called “suicide note” was discovered by his former cellmate after 7 years as a convicted sex offender.

The note with no date, no signature that could prove Epstein’s identity was made public Wednesday, May 6 by Judge Kenneth M. Karas of the Federal District Court in White Plains, New York.

The note says: “They investigated me for a month, found nothing!!! It’s a pleasure to be able to choose your time to say goodbye. Watcha wants me to do – Stop crying!! NO FUN – THIS IS NOT WORTH IT!!

In court documents, Epstein’s fellow inmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, who is a former police officer convicted of four murders, said he found the note in a graphic novel after Epstein’s suicide attempt in July 2019. Tartaglione claims he revived Epstein with CPR after the suicide attempt.

Epstein was found dead in his Manhattan prison cell a few weeks later, at the age of 66, with the cause of death listed as suicide. Since then, Epstein’s death has been the center of conspiracy theories, although the Justice Department released prison surveillance footage last year, revealing that no one had entered his cell that day.

Experts compare the handwriting of his previous postcard. There are some similarities in the two handwriting samples, including a slight slant to the right, joining letters in a cursive manner, and some inconsistency in the spacing between words, indicating that both writers have a relatively unorganized manner of writing.

No authoritative source has yet confirmed that it was Epstein himself.

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