A newly released note linked to Jeffrey Epstein reportedly matches the handwriting of a message authorities found in his cell after he died. The note, attributed to the same writer by a former cellmate, includes claims about investigators “for month” finding “nothing” and references choosing the “time to say goodbye,” intensifying scrutiny around the timelines.
A new report revisits a disputed note connected to Jeffrey Epstein and Nicholas Tartaglione. Tartaglione is said to have handed the note to his legal team, yet its existence was scarcely mentioned in later years, including after Epstein’s death. The development reignites questions about what was documented, when, and why it remained largely underreported.
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Nearly seven years after Jeffrey Epstein’s death, a federal court unsealed a handwritten suicide note linked to his first apparent suicide attempt in July 2019. The note was found by cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione inside a graphic novel in a New York jail. Its language reportedly matches phrases from Epstein’s emails, reinforcing claims he was suicidal weeks before his death.
Italian former model Elisabetta Tai Ferretto, who accused Jeffrey Epstein of sexual abuse, has been found safe in the US after her family said they lost contact in April. After visiting Italy earlier, she was located in a Florida detention facility. Ferretto was among the first to publicly describe an alleged encounter with Epstein in 2004.
A judge has ordered the release of a previously sealed note linked to Jeffrey Epstein, found by his former cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione after Epstein’s first suspected suicide attempt. Tartaglione, serving a life sentence, says he discovered the note inside a book. The decision adds a new, closely scrutinized detail to the ongoing investigation and legal fallout around Epstein’s death.
A U.S. court has released Jeffrey Epstein-related files, including a suicide note that had been sealed for years. The disclosure came from Judge Kenneth Karas of the Southern District of New York, where the letter was kept as part of another inmate’s criminal proceedings. The release renews scrutiny around the circumstances of Epstein’s death.
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Nearly seven years after Jeffrey Epstein died in a Manhattan jail, an alleged “bombshell” suicide note tied to his death still sits sealed in a New York courthouse. Reports say the note was found by his cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione after Epstein was discovered unresponsive in 2019. Even after findings of suicide, conspiracy claims and public pressure have kept attention focused on the document.
Ahead of US President Donald Trump’s gala dinner with the White House Correspondents’ Association, a video montage linking Trump and late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was projected onto the Washington Hilton. The clip, made of photos and footage, appeared on the venue’s side the night before the event, quickly drawing online attention and raising fresh questions about the controversy’s timing and intent.
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