Washington.- A U.S. federal judge made public this Wednesday an alleged suicide note from
pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, which would have been found by the magnate's former cellmate in a graphic novel.
"They investigated me for months, THEY FOUND NOTHING!!!", begins the note that was published by Judge Kenneth Karas, from a federal court in New York, who supervised the case of Epstein's cellmate.
The note, which was included in the court file of the case tonight, continues with: "It is a privilege to be able to choose the moment to say goodbye".
The Story Behind the Alleged Suicide Note
According to court records, Nicholas Tartaglione, Epstein's cellmate, stated that he discovered the note in July 2019, after the magnate was found unconscious with a strip of cloth around his neck.
Epstein survived that incident, but two weeks later he was found dead in his cell at the age of 66 in the Metropolitan Correctional Center of Lower Manhattan.
The note, whose veracity has not been verified by US media, has been made public after The New York Times requested the court last week to disclose the document in which Tartaglione described the note and how it came into his possession.
What would be Epstein's last letter, before his death, was not found among the millions of pages and court files that the Department of Justice published between December and January.
We recommend reading:
Before the revelation of this note, the Secretary of Commerce, Howard Lutnick, was questioned by Congress in a new subpoena of personalities who maintained relationships with the magnate and during this month other figures such as former Attorney General Pam Bondi and the billionaires Leon Black and Bill Gates will have to answer questions from the representatives.