CA, US & World
Guards Ignored Chilling Suicide Warnings Before Jeffrey Epstein’s Death, NYT Reports
NEW YORK — A definitive months-long investigation by The New York Times has brought to light stunning new details surrounding the final days of Jeffrey Epstein. Drawing from millions of publicly released documents and dozens of interviews with inmates, guards, and law enforcement officials, the report strongly reinforces the conclusion that Epstein took his own life while exposing systemic failures and ignored warnings within the federal prison system.
According to the investigative team, the evidence overwhelmingly points to suicide rather than a homicidal cover-up. Reporters noted that pulling off a murder in that environment would have required a massive, near-impossible conspiracy. Instead, the files reveal an inmate in clear psychological distress. In the days leading up to his death, Epstein reportedly penned several handwritten notes, including one dark reflection stating there was only pain to me and others in the future, adding it was not very much fun.
The investigation highlights explicit, repeated warnings provided by Epstein’s cellmates that were apparently discounted by correctional staff. Nick Tartaglione, a former cellmate since convicted of multiple murders, told investigators that after Epstein returned from a court hearing where he was denied bail, he openly asked how to make a noose. Tartaglione claimed he personally caught Epstein preparing for suicide on two separate occasions, including an attempt to tie a bedsheet to the grate over the cell window. While Tartaglione insisted he alerted the guards, no preventative actions were taken. Shortly after, Epstein was found motionless but alive following what federal authorities logged as a failed suicide attempt.
Following that incident, Epstein was paired with his final cellmate, Efrain Reyes. Reyes recounted telling Epstein directly not to attempt suicide while sharing the space. When Reyes was later transferred out of the unit, internal documents show he explicitly warned prison guards to find Epstein a reliable cellmate, cautioning that he was not good to be left alone.
Despite that warning, prison officials committed what reporters characterized as a critical error: they failed to assign a new cellmate. Experts interviewed for the report emphasized that inmates are statistically much less likely to self-harm when another person is present in the room. Left completely unmonitored and alone, Epstein was discovered dead within twenty-four hours of Reyes' departure.
The unsealed Epstein files have also rippled into current political discourse. During an appearance on the daytime talk show The View on Tuesday, Vice President JD Vance defended Donald Trump’s historical association with the financier. Vance stated that while Trump originally knew Epstein back in the 1980s, he promptly banned him from his private club and reported him to authorities upon learning of his illicit behavior.
This defense is substantiated by an official document within the newly public Epstein files. The record confirms that Trump placed a call to the Palm Beach Police Department when the initial investigation into Epstein began. In a conversation with the local police chief, Trump expressed relief over the law enforcement crackdown, stating, thank goodness you are stopping him, everyone has known he has been doing this.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 16, 2026


