Jeffrey Epstein tried to kill himself 17 days after being incarcerated on federal sex-trafficking charges, but two days after the incident he told a psychologist that he had no interest in killing himself. That is from a jointly published article at the BBC and Yahoo! News about a declassified report on Epstein's death in prison. The report is among millions of documents published on Friday (1/30/26) by the U.S. Department of Justice as part of the most recent Epstein files release.
News accounts of the release, so far, have tended to focus on statements from Epstein victims, often made under oath in court proceedings or tips to the FBI. A particular emphasis has been on allegations of rape, murder and threats of violence by Epstein friend and now U.S. President Donald Trump. The Epstein death report has a different kind of focus, as BBC reporters Shayan Sardarizadeh and Matt Murphy make clear in a story that begins with this notice: Warning: this story contains graphic content which some readers might find distressing. The BBC journalists write:
Previously unseen photos showing Jeffrey Epstein's body lying on a stretcher and being attended to by medics in the immediate aftermath of his death have been released by the U.S. government.
Twenty images, many of which are too graphic to show, were published as part of a declassified FBI report into Epstein's death in custody, as well as a post-mortem examination and internal prison documents.
Epstein was found dead in his prison cell on 10 August 2019. He had been held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York on sex trafficking and conspiracy charges ahead of trial.
The newly released FBI report, titled "Jeffrey Epstein death investigation", appears to be a probe into his death by the agency's field office in New York. The 23-page report has an "unclassified" note stamped on each page.
The unredacted documents, viewed by BBC Verify, show close-up images of Epstein's neck and visible signs of injury. They also contain details of Epstein's post-mortem examination and a psychology report on his mental health in the days before he killed himself.
The report includes images from a scene one might expect to see in a hospital emergency room. The journalists write:
BBC Verify ran reverse image searches on the newly released photos of Epstein's body and could not find earlier versions of them published online prior to 30 January. We also found other corroborating material released in the files, including an 89-page post-mortem report on Epstein filed by the DOJ and the Office of Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) in New York, and emails from the FBI New York field office containing the same redacted images.
Parts of Epstein's post-mortem report by the OCME also appear in the report, including scans of two fractures on Epstein's thyroid cartilage in his neck.
The report might be the most detailed account many Americans have seen of what life was like for Epstein in prison:
The FBI report includes a six-page timeline of Epstein's detention at the New York Metropolitan Correctional Center from his arrest on federal sex trafficking charges on 6 July 2019 until his death. It reveals that Epstein was placed on suicide watch after he tried to kill himself on 23 July 2019. Epstein accused his cell mate - Nicholas Tartaglione, a former police officer facing murder charges - of trying to kill him at the time.
In a meeting with a psychologist the following day, Epstein said that he had "no interest in killing myself" and that it "would be crazy" to take his life, the document states. On 25 July, he stated he was "too vested in my case to fight it, I have a life and I want to go back to living my life", according to the psychologist report.
Roughly two weeks later, Epstein was found dead in his cell. His name now is front and center in news accounts that have come to envelop the Trump White House as reporters look for clues about Epstein's unsavory interactions with a growing cast of the world's rich, famous, and powerful.
Epstein surely was the nation's most publicized and vulnerable prisoner at the time, but security around him hardly was airtight, as the report makes clear:
Other documents released by the DOJ show the prison's warden had advised that Epstein should not be housed alone and emphasized the need for "30-minute checks" on his cell and "unannounced rounds" to be undertaken.
Epstein's cellmate was released the day before his death. On the night of 9 August the prison guards also failed to conduct checks scheduled for 03:00 and 05:00, prison documents show, and the camera system in the unit was also down. His body was discovered during a morning check carried out by staff.
A second, redacted version of the same FBI report that is only 17 pages long has also been published as part of the Epstein files. It does not include the psychologist's report or the timeline of his detention and the images in the file are redacted. It is not clear why both redacted and unredacted versions of the report have been included in the files.
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