KEY POINTS
  • Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who hung himself in his Manhattan jail cell, was left alone and not monitored by guards who were supposed to check on him every thirty minutes, a law-enforcement official with knowledge of his detention told the New York Times. 
  • Epstein's cell mate had been transferred out at the time of Epstein's suicide, the Times reported, leaving him alone only two weeks after he was taken off suicide watch, a move that also violated the Metropolitan Correctional Center's standard protocol, according to officials.
  • Epstein had been found unconscious in his cell on July 23, with marks around his neck. 
  • As the Justice Department and FBI investigate Epstein's death, the Federal Bureau of Prisons is under intense scrutiny for not keeping Epstein on suicide watch after his first apparent suicide attempt. 
Jeffrey Epstein in 2004.

Jeffrey Epstein, the disgraced financier who hung himself in his Manhattan jail cell, was left alone and not monitored by guards who were supposed to check on him every 30 minutes, a law-enforcement official with knowledge of his detention told The New York Times.

Epstein's cell mate had been transferred out at the time of Epstein's suicide, the Times reported, leaving him alone only two weeks after he was taken off suicide watch, a move that also violated the Metropolitan Correctional Center's standard protocol, according to officials. Epstein had been found unconscious in his cell on July 23, with marks around his neck.