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Conspiracies Epstein Dies in Custody - Alleged Suicide, Some Speculate it was a Hit Job

I can confirm it works for more ACCURATE answers than not. We ran dozenssssss of Operations based off info we've obtained from this technique (successful ones, mind you).
You may have been working with a sample size that had something to lose (a wife, kids, their own lives). And/or were hoping to be saved from the hell they were recruited into.

Did you ever take that into consideration? Do you think you'd crack as easily?
 
You may have been working with a sample size that had something to lose (a wife, kids, their own lives). And/or were hoping to be saved from the hell they were recruited into.

Did you ever take that into consideration? Do you think you'd crack as easily?
Our sample size is EASILY in the hundreds. I don't know anything about them, as "that" was never apart of my job. My job was to use the intel I received (from them or others) and use it on Ops.

I have been tortured. We are trained to "resist" interrogations. I already know I wouldn't "crack as easily". I have no problem dying for my country.
 
Our sample size is EASILY in the hundreds. I don't know anything about them, as "that" was never apart of my job. My job was to use the intel I received (from them or others) and use it on Ops.

I have been tortured. We are trained to "resist" interrogations. I already know I wouldn't "crack as easily". I have no problem dying for my country.
Yeah because you have something worth dying for. They don't. (imo)
 

Jeffrey Epstein had a bizarre portrait of Bill Clinton in a dress hanging in his Manhattan mansion, DailyMailTV can reveal.

The picture depicting the former president apparently lounging on a chair in the Oval Office, wearing red heels and posing suggestively in a blue dress redolent of Monica Lewinsky was in a room off the stairway of the Upper East Side townhouse.

The dress is also strikingly similar to one worn by Hillary Clinton at the 2009 Kennedy Center Honors.

The original painting is called 'Parsing Bill' and is by Australian-American artist Petrina Ryan-Kleid, although it is unclear if Epstein had bought the canvas or had a print mounted. Ryan-Kleid exhibited for her degree show when she graduated with an MFA in 2012 from the New York Academy of Art.


The painting was secretly snapped inside the pedophile's lavish $56 million home in October 2012, four years after Epstein completed his sweetheart deal for prostitution of a minor and seven years before he was accused of running a sex trafficking ring of underage girls.

13807



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Jeffrey Epstein’s St. Thomas Network, Comms, And An Elite School

 
Within the last two years, Epstein separately told four confidants that he was advising the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman on financial matters.

 
All I'm saying is that this was karma at it's finest moment. It doesn't matter how he died. He's gone and the world is a better place.
 

Apparently Jeffrey Epstein had a broken hyoid bone, which is most commonly caused in strangulation. However, it is also caused by hanging, and more easily broken in older people.

That's like saying we found a bullet in someone's corpse. Doesn't explain if they did it to themselves or someone else did it to them, only confirms the mode of death.
 

Apparently Jeffrey Epstein had a broken hyoid bone, which is most commonly caused in strangulation. However, it is also caused by hanging, and more easily broken in older people.

Id take that then to be evidence of nothing. It's consistent with suicide, but in no real way is inconsistent with the murder theory.

If he were murdered, you would assume it would be done in a way as to try and conceal it.
 
Apparently nobody has committed suicide in this place in 40 years.
The bedsheets are made of paper.
 
"The Metropolitan Correctional Center's two guards claimed to have checked on Epstein every 30 minutes, but had actually been asleep for up to three hours, officials familiar with the ongoing probe told The New York Times."

They took a 3 hour nap together. They synchronized?

"Surveillance video reviewed after the death showed guards never made some of the checks noted in the log, according to the person familiar with the investigation (Daily Mail)

"Until the jail's protocol, Epstein would not have been given a bedsheet had he been on suicide watch"
 

The apparent suicide of Jeffrey Epstein has brought new scrutiny to a federal jail in New York that, despite chronic understaffing, houses some of the highest-security inmates in the country.

Epstein’s death is also the latest black eye for the U.S. Bureau of Prisons, the jail’s parent agency that already was under fire for the October death of Boston gangster James “Whitey” Bulger, who was fatally beaten at a federal prison in West Virginia shortly after his arrival.

Taken together, the deaths underscore “serious issues surrounding a lack of leadership” within the BOP, said Cameron Lindsay, a former warden who ran three federal lockups, including the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn.

A defense attorney for Epstein, Marc Fernich, also faulted jail officials, saying they “recklessly put Mr. Epstein in harm’s way” and failed to protect him.

The Bureau of Prisons did not respond to repeated requests for details about Epstein’s death. But Attorney General William Barr demanded answers, saying he was appalled by the apparent suicide and announcing a pair of federal inquiries by the FBI and the Justice Department’s inspector general.

Attorney General William Barr said Monday the Justice Department has already found “serious irregularities” at the Manhattan jail where Epstein was being held, adding that the facility “failed to adequately secure this prisoner.”

Barr also issued a stern warning, saying the case was far from over and that anyone who may have conspired with Epstein “should not rest easy.”

Epstein, 66, had pleaded not guilty to federal sex trafficking and conspiracy charges. His lawyers maintained the charges against him violated a non-prosecution agreement he signed over a decade ago.

Epstein’s death brings fresh attention to the staffing at Manhattan’s Metropolitan Correctional Center, where shortages worsened by a partial government shutdown prompted inmates to stage a hunger strike in January after they were denied family and lawyer visits.

Eight months later, the lockup remains so short-staffed that the BOP is offering correctional officers a $10,000 bonus to transfer there from other federal lockups. That’s on top of a so-called “recruitment incentive” that amounts to 10% of new guards’ first-year salaries.

Staffing shortfalls are resulting in extreme overtime shifts, in which guards may work up to 16 hours a day. A person familiar with the jail’s operations told The Associated Press that a guard in Epstein’s unit was working a fifth straight day of overtime and another guard was working mandatory overtime the day he was found.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because he lacked authorization to publicly discuss jail operations.

Those conditions could make it more difficult for correctional officers to enforce the BOP’s strict measures for screening security risks. Those protocols acknowledge that inmates held in so-called special housing units, as Epstein was, “may be at a higher risk for suicidal behavior.”

Those safeguards — including cell checks every 30 minutes — were not followed the night before Epstein’s death, The New York Times reported Sunday, citing a law enforcement official familiar with the investigation.

Epstein had been alone in his cell when he was found unresponsive Saturday, even though he only recently had returned to the Special Housing Unit from suicide watch, the person familiar with the jail’s operations said. The jail had placed him on 24-hour monitoring — with daily psychiatric evaluations — after he was found injured on the floor of his cell two weeks ago with neck bruises.

Catherine Linaweaver, who retired in 2014 after 16 months as the MCC’s warden, said some people were overreacting to Epstein’s suicide because he was well known. She noted the limitations jailers face when someone decides to take his or her own life.

“If someone really wants to commit suicide,” Linaweaver said, “they’re going to do it.”

For more than a decade, the union that represents federal correctional officers has been warning of what it describes as “unsound” and “dangerous” staffing levels at prisons around the country. In general population units, there’s often just one officer to deal with more than 125 inmates.

Eric Williams, a correctional officer at a federal penitentiary in Canaan, Pennsylvania, was working alone on a bi-level unit in February 2013 when inmate Jessie Con-ui hurled him down a concrete staircase and stabbed himrepeatedly with a makeshift blade, killing him.

The attack came so suddenly and with such force, Williams never had a chance to call for help. No one at the prison thought to look for Williams until an officer noticed he had not returned at the end of his shift.

The MCC’s sister federal lockup — the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, which houses more than 1,600 inmates — has had its own troubles in recent years.

Former prison guard Eugenio Perez was recently sentenced to 25 years in prison for sexually abusing female inmates. Another prison guard arrested along with Perez was convicted of raping a female inmate, while a third pleaded guilty to sexual abuse.

In February, the Justice Department asked the Office of Inspector General to review whether the Bureau of Prisons responded appropriately to a weeklong power outage at the facility that left inmates shivering and led defense lawyers to sue over what they described as a “humanitarian crisis.”

“What I see is a continued deterioration of leadership in the BOP,” said Jack Donson, a retired correctional treatment specialist who worked for the agency for more than two decades.

Epstein’s death is hardly the first scandal at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, which last year saw a prison guard plead guilty to taking more than $25,000 in cash bribes to smuggle cellphones, alcohol and food to a wealthy Turkish gold trader. The guard, Victor Casado , was sentenced in January to three years in prison by a judge who called the crime an assault on “our entire system of justice.”

The 12-story jail had been designed to house 449 inmates when it opened in 1975 near the Brooklyn Bridge. Its population ballooned within two years to 539 inmates, prompting a judge to declare it “unacceptably cramped and oppressive for most healthy inmates.”

Today it holds more than 760 inmates and counts among its former star inhabitants the Mexican drug lord and escape artist Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, Mafia boss John Gotti, several close associates of Osama bin Laden and Wall Street swindler Bernard Madoff.

Authorities tightened security after a guard was seriously injured in 2000 by a terrorist convicted in the deadly 1998 embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.

Ron Kuby, who once represented a blind Egyptian sheik sentenced to life in prison after a 1990s Manhattan terrorism trial, said the lockup houses some of “the highest-security prisoners on earth.”

He said that while suicide attempts among inmates are commonplace, “it’s been a long time since they lost somebody.”

“The overall quality of staffing tends to be better than your average county jail in Bumbleberg,” he said.
 
Id take that then to be evidence of nothing. It's consistent with suicide, but in no real way is inconsistent with the murder theory.

If he were murdered, you would assume it would be done in a way as to try and conceal it.
nice post ! but what is goin on. something for sure.
 
nice post ! but what is goin on. something for sure.

I don't know, I don't claim to either.

All in all, if I were forced to take a side, I'd probably side with it being suicide, simply because it's the simpler possibility. But I'm by no means confident in that, and if it were murder that wouldn't exactly shock me.

Of course I'm sure the ultra conspiracy theorist types are already making this as convoluted and rediculous as possible. Before long they'll probably push most sensible people into siding with the suicide theory just to not be associated with their crazy. Which is a shame, because as it stands, the idea that he was murdered is by no means a crazy thing to suspect.



I've been meaning to say this for a while...

Honestly Grimez, at this point I just ignore nearly all your posts. I want you to know though, it's not because I dislike you, I don't. I honestly have no problem with you on a personal level. I just think your way of viewing the world is so at odds with mine that we're effectively not in the same reality anymore.

Which makes interesting discussion impossible. There's no way to have constructive discussion when both sides can't even agree on what constitutes evidence, or what constitutes rational thought.

Because of that, I just don't even try most of the time anymore.

EDIT: Actually, I should clarify, I don't ignore them as in not reading them, I do read them (I don't watch YouTube clips though), by ignore I mean I see no point in replying to them most of the time.
 
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