EFTA00141120.pdf
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FD-302 (Rev. 5-8-10)
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FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
OFFICIAL Moony
ti ff n .j
n
—
.....
Date of entry
08/16/2019
at the Bureau of Prison's (BoP)
METROPOLITAN CORRECTIONAL CENTER (MCC), 150 Park Row, New York, New York,
cellular telephone number
, business telephone number-
-,
was interviewed by FBI Special Agent (SA)
Office of the Inspector General (OIG) SA
, and Assistant United
States Attorney (AUSA)
of the Southern District of New York at
FBI-New York offices at 290 Broadway, New York, New York. SA
provided
with an OIG "Warnings and Assurances to Employee Requested to
Provide Information on a Voluntary Basis" form, which
signed and was
witnessed by SAs
and
. SA
retained the original and a
copy is attached in the lA section of this report.
After being advised of the identities of the interviewing Agents and
AUSA,
provided the following information:
has worked for BoP since March 6, 1994 and has worked at MCC
since May 14, 2019. Prior to the MCC,
worked at BoP's Federal
Correctional Institution (FCI) Fort Dix (New Jersey), FCI Fairton (New
Jersey), FCI Coleman (Florida), and FCI Yazoo City (Mississippi).
has worked in Special Housing Units (SHUs) since 1995.
became a
supervisor in 2002 and a SHU supervisor in 2003, with the title of
Lieutenant.
does not have a BoP-issued phone and, like all MCC
employees, cannot use his personal cellular telephone inside the facility,
instead using radios to communicate. Flip phones are only available to
personnel who need them when they leave the facility with prisoners or for
other specific reasons.
currently supervises four areas of the MCC: 9 North, 11 South, 11
North, and 9 South. All areas under
supervision are regular units
with the exception of 9 South, which is the Long Term Special Housing Unit
(SHU).
technically supervises four employees; two counselors and two
invcsugadon on 08/12/2019 at New York, New York, United States (In Person)
Fikst 90A—NY-3151227
Date drafted 08/13/2019
by
This document contains neither recommendations nor conclusions of the FBI. It is the moµ, ty of the FBI and is loaned to your agency; it and its contents arc no;
to be distributed outside your agency.
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case managers. However, he is currently without one counselor and case
manager, which MCC is looking to hire, in addition to a secretary.
Each day, there are three working watches at the MCC. The day watch
begins at 7:30 a.m. and ends at 4:00 p.m. The night watch begins at 4:00
p.m. and ends at midnight. The morning watch begins at midnight and ends at
8:00 a.m. Corrections Officers (COs) hold the rank of GS-5, GS-6, GS-7, or
GS-8. They are organized into four groups; SHU 1, SHU 2, SHU 3, and SHU 4.
Typically, the SHU 1 CO has the keys and therefore can't go down range and
interact with inmates. SHU 1 opens and closes the doors and completes
paperwork. SHU 2, 3, and 4 conduct rounds, provide the inmates with food,
and secure the showers. At other BOP facilities where
has worked,
each group would be responsible for a separate range but that is not how it
is organized at MCC, where each group does all ranges. There are six ranges
within
area of responsibility but only lieutenants can access one
of the G range.
Two COs perform a count of all inmates at midnight, 3:00 a.m., and 5:00
a.m. In addition to these counts, COs conduct rounds every half-hour once
the unit is locked down and the inmates are secured in their cells. Both
counts and rounds are recorded, but on different types of sheets.
reviewed examples of documentation of both counts and rounds which were
provided by AUSA
, copies of which are attached in the IA section of
this report. The record of overnight rounds is signed by the Morning Watch
Officer.
COs report to lieutenants, either the Operations Lieutenant or the
Activities Lieutenant. The Operations Lieutenant handles overall issues
while the Activities Lieutenant handles rounds and communication with staff.
The day and night watch have both lieutenants on staff, but the morning
watch only has the Operations Lieutenant. During the evening watch, the
Activities Lieutenant makes a single round through his/her assigned units so
that inmates have access to someone higher up the chain of command than
their normal COs. During the morning watch, the Operations Lieutenant does
the round. There is no sheet that documents these watches, but the
lieutenants do keep a log of their rounds. On August 9, 2019, the day before
JEFFREY EPSTEIN was found deceased in his cell, Lieutenant
was the
Activities Lieutenant and Lieutenant
was the Operations Lieutenant,
who was filling in for another lieutenant on leave. The lieutenants report
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to
who always works the day watch.
In the SHU, inmates are allowed a single social call once a month,
lasting fifteen minutes. To make a legal call, inmates must make a written
request, called a cop-out. On days when inmates aren't allowed to shower,
which is Tuesdays and Thursdays,
goes through the cop-out requests
and begins the process of providing inmates with legal calls. To make a
legal call, there is a specific phone that
brings to each cell and
plugs into a jack outside the cell.
considers it a good day when he
can get through all the requested legal calls in two full ranges.
did not remember when EPSTEIN first came to the SHU.
figures EPSTEIN must have been housed with the prison's general inmate
population at some point because, approximately one month ago, while EPSTEIN
was already housed in the SHU, an inmate in the general prison population
told
that EPSTEIN wanted to speak with
without providing a
reason.
never had an in-depth conversation with EPSTEIN regarding
this matter because EPSTEIN spent twelve hours a day, from 8:00 a.m. until
8:00 p.m., meeting with his lawyers. Any time
ran into EPSTEIN, he
appeared to be in a good mood and
thought he was just a happy guy.
does know that EPSTEIN was housed in the SHU when he attempted to
commit suicide in July.
was in the elevator with one of the MCC's
doctors who said she was en route to the SHU to tell all personnel that
EPSTEIN always needed to have a cellmate as a result of this incident. This
information was not provided in writing or listed anywhere in writing in the
SHU office, it was instead passed onto each watch by word of mouth.
During the days prior to EPSTEIN's death,
ran into EPSTEIN as he
was being escorted downstairs to meet with his lawyers on either Wednesday
or Thursday. EPSTEIN told
he needed to set up his pack and pin,
which allows inmates to make social calls. However, EPSTEIN had been unable
to set it up because he was always meeting with his lawyers and was never in
the SHU. EPSTEIN asked
to assist him because his normal unit manager
was on leave.
looked in the system and verified the only call made
by EPSTEIN from the MCC was the three-minute call given to inmates at the
time of their initial intake into the facility.
made the request for
EPSTEIN and obtained a paper printout of his pack and pin and provided it to
EPSTEIN. EPSTEIN was happy, as were his lawyers, who made a thumbs-up
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On Friday, August 9, 2019,
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worked from 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. as
the Duty Officer. EPSTEIN told
he wanted to make a call to his
mother but had not yet been able to set up his pack and pin.
views
ensuring his inmates have family socialization as part of his job, so he
allows inmates having technical problems with their pack and pin a single,
fifteen minute call.
told EPSTEIN his watch was ending at 7:00 p.m.
that day and the only way he would be able to help him make a call was if he
ended his meeting with the lawyers earlier than normal.
checked and
confirmed that EPSTEIN had not yet set up his pack and pin. At approximately
6:45 p.m.,
found EPSTEIN waiting for him to make that call.
EPSTEIN was handcuffed, searched, and brought upstairs.
did not
know which cell was EPSTEIN's and instead put EPSTEIN in the shower area on
the G tier, which
prefers for phone calls because inmates are not
locked in their cells with the ability to pull the phone cord into their
locked cell and use it to commit self-harm. The phone cord barely reaches
into the shower, where the guards are also physically present with EPSTEIN.
used the first outlet on the left, which is the legal line. EPSTEIN
provided
with a phone number beginning with
).
dialed
the number and a male picked up the phone.
handed the phone to
EPSTEIN and heard him say, "Hey, how you doing? How's everything?"
then left because his watch was over and EPSTEIN was being guarded by SHU
COs
and
and
from Internal.
described EPSTEIN as very happy that he was able to make a phone call.
On the day EPSTEIN was found deceased (Saturday, August 10, 2019),
Officer.
was scheduled to work from 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. as the Duty
received a phone call from
said EPSTEIN had attempted to commit
the time he arrived at MCC, the news
Prior to arriving at work,
who
suicide.
took the train and, by
media was reporting that EPSTEIN was deceased.
Upon arriving at the MCC,
completed some tasks before
assigned him to the hospital on Park Row, which is separate from the
main MCC building, and where EPSTEIN's body was being guarded. When
arrived at the hospital with Case Management Coordinator (CMC) D.
who was responsible for taking EPSTEIN's fingerprints, COs
and
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were with EPSTEIN's body and had secured the scene.
remained with
COs
and
until personnel from the Office of Chief Medical
Examiner (OCME) arrived to transport EPSTEIN to their facility. Due to the
large news media presence outside the MCC, a male OCHE official called and
said he would be arriving at the loading dock with a black vehicle. In order
to thwart the media,
, and
used boxes and sheets to
create what appeared to be a human body, which was put into the white OCME
vehicle which the press followed, allowing the black vehicle to depart
unnoticed with EPSTEIN's body.
After OCHE departed with EPSTEIN's body,
returned to MCC and
wrote a memo containing a timeline of events and a recount of the previous
night's phone call.
provided this to
, who is also new to
MCC.
ad emailed
but
responded that he
couldn't talk about the situation. The only colleague whose phone number
has is
, because he had to use his personal phone to
email her his timeline of events and pictures of EPSTEIN's body prior to its
transport by OCME. After sending these pictures,
deleted them from
his phone.
didn't speak, text, or email with anyone else except his
wife, who also works at the MCC in the Food Services section.
heard other MCC employees discussing the suicide and how everyone
was nervous and hoped all protocols had been followed.
heard from
unspecified SHU personnel that EPSTEIN was found slumped over in his cell
with a noose around his neck.
did not hear any other specifics
except for CO
, who said he remembered EPSTEIN giving him a thumbs-up
when he conducted the 10:00 p.m. stand-up count, when all inmates must
physically stand. After his death,
learned EPSTEIN was housed on L
tier, which houses approximately fifteen inmates.
The only time
saw the COs who were on watch during EPSTEIN's
suicide was at some point on Saturday, August 10, 2019, when CO
was
standing outside the lieutenants' office and appeared to be in a daze.
knew Lieutenant
conducted two welfare checks on employees that
did not report to work on August 12, 2019; COs
and
. These
welfare checks are typically generated by the warden.
observed that things are done differently at MCC than other BOP
facilities at which
has worked.
believes that, because MCC
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is a high-rise facility and not a stand-alone facility, it may have allowed
complacency to develop. One example of the difference between those other
facilities and MCC is that MCC SHU inmates are allowed multiple sets of
clothing and bedsheets at a time. Another example is that other SHUs have a
color-coded board in the SHU office visually depicting special needs of
inmates. Such a board would have provided a visual reminder to all SHU
employees that EPSTEIN was to have a cellmate at all times.
did not know that EPSTEIN's cellmate had not returned from court
on Friday. When showed the MCC Daily Assignment Rosters from August 9, 2019
and August 10, 2019 (copies of which are attached in the lA section of this
report),
said COs
, and
would have been in a position to know EPSTEIN was without a cellmate based
on their assignments. If
had been aware, he would have kept EPSTEIN
handcuffed in a holding cell until he found him a new cellmate.
was not aware that the MCC's video surveillance system was not
functioning properly at the time of EPSTEIN's death.
always operated
under the assumption that it was and that someone was always watching.
did not have access to the live camera feed, only lieutenants could
view the system.
EFTA00141125
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| Filename | EFTA00141120.pdf |
| File Size | 400.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 13,682 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T10:49:08.757576 |