NEWS
JUDGE OVERRULED: DOJ Caught Deleting 4 Hidden Pages of Epstein’s Suicide Note Before Public Release!”
NEW YORK CITY — A firestorm of controversy has erupted following the court-ordered release of Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged final suicide note. While the public was presented with a single page of frantic scribbles, a high-level whistleblower within the Southern District of New York (SDNY) has come forward with a chilling allegation: the Department of Justice (DOJ) suppressed four additional pages that name specific political figures.
According to sources close to the legal proceedings, the document released by Judge Kenneth Karas on Monday was “heavily curated.” The whistleblower, an administrative clerk with 15 years of service, claims that the original file recovered from the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) contained a multi-page manifesto detailing financial transactions and “insurance policies” against his former associates.
”What the public saw was the fluff,” the source stated under anonymity. “The actual meat of the note—the ‘who, what, and where’ of the Caribbean operations—was extracted under a ‘National Security’ classification before the judge could even review the full stack.”
Independent forensic analysts have already pointed out glaring inconsistencies in the evidence logs. The original evidence bag—logged as Item #402-B—was initially recorded as weighing 18 grams. However, the single sheet of paper released this week weighs approximately 4.5 grams.
”The math doesn’t lie,” says digital investigator Marcus Thorne. “Unless Epstein was writing on lead plates, there are at least three to four sheets of standard-weight paper missing from that evidence file.”
This latest revelation mirrors the infamous “equipment malfunction” that saw the CCTV footage outside Epstein’s cell disappear during the night of his death. Skeptics argue that the deletion of these pages is the final nail in the coffin of the official narrative.
Legal experts are now filing emergency motions to have the original, unredacted evidence bag brought before a grand jury, though the DOJ has responded with a standard “no comment,” citing ongoing litigation involving Epstein’s former cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione.
What Was in the Deleted Text?
Rumors swirling on Capitol Hill suggest the missing pages contain:
Wire transfer numbers linked to offshore accounts in the Cayman Islands. Personal aliases used by three former heads of state during visits to “Little St. James.” The location of a secondary “deadman’s switch” server hidden in Europe.
As the pressure mounts, the question remains: Will the DOJ be forced to produce the missing pages, or has the most incriminating evidence in modern history been permanently erased?
