Jeffrey Epstein autopsy report shows broken neck: Washington Post
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[August 15, 2019]
By Rich McKay
(Reuters) - The autopsy into financier
Jeffrey Epstein, who died in an apparent suicide while awaiting trial on
sex trafficking charges, found his neck had been broken in several
places, the Washington Post reported late on Wednesday.
Such injuries can occur to people who hang themselves or who are
strangled, the newspaper said. It cited unidentified sources familiar
with the autopsy's results.
Epstein, a multi-millionaire and convicted sexual offender, was found
dead in his jail cell in New York City on Saturday. The circumstances of
his death are under investigation.
The New York Medical Examiner's office could not be reached for comment
on the Post report early on Thursday and a representative did not
immediately respond to Reuters by phone or text message.
It was unclear if the medical examiner has made a final determination
into the cause of death, but NBC news cited an unnamed source as saying
Epstein's body had been claimed by an associate.
It was also unclear when the autopsy report would be finished or made
public.
Epstein, 66, who once counted Republican President Donald Trump and
Democratic former President Bill Clinton as friends, was found
unresponsive in his cell on Saturday morning, according to the Federal
Bureau of Prisons.
A source told Reuters previously that he was found hanging by the neck.
Epstein pleaded not guilty in July to charges of sex trafficking
involving dozens of underage girls between 2002 and 2005. Prosecutors
said he recruited girls to give him massages, which became sexual in
nature.
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U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein appears in a photograph taken for the
New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services' sex offender
registry March 28, 2017 and obtained by Reuters July 10, 2019. New
York State Division of Criminal Justice Services/Handout/File Photo
via REUTERS.
Attorney General William Barr has said the criminal investigation
into any possible co-conspirators would continue.
Barr, whose agency oversees the Bureau of Prisons, has also demanded
an investigation into Epstein's death and ordered the removal of the
prison's warden.
The disgraced financier had been on suicide watch at the
Metropolitan Correctional Center in lower Manhattan but was then put
back in a regular cell.
Multiple news reports have said guards did not follow procedures to
check on Epstein frequently and that he was left alone in his cell
for as long as three hours.
Separately, a team at the jail on Wednesday began an "after action"
review, which is normally triggered by significant events such as a
prominent inmate's death, a person familiar with the matter said.
That review is being headed by a prison bureau director from another
region.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Darren Schuettler
and John Stonestreet)
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