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Was Epstein on Suicide Watch When He Died?

Was Epstein on Suicide Watch When He Died?
Was Epstein on Suicide Watch When He Died?

After an apparent attempt to take his own life three weeks ago, Jeffrey Epstein — the financier who was at the facility awaiting trial on charges he sexually abused dozens of underage girls — would have been a prime candidate.

Yet Epstein, 66, hanged himself and his body was found in his cell early on Saturday, according to officials.

It remained unclear if he had been placed on suicide watch after his first attempt at suicide on July 25, when he was found unconscious in his cell with bruises on his neck. The federal Bureau of Prisons did not immediately respond to requests for information.

Epstein had been housed in a cell with Nicholas Tartaglione, a former police officer facing murder charges. It was unclear if he was still being held with another inmate as of Saturday morning.

Both men had been held in a special unit with strict security measures that is used to separate some inmates from the general population and that has held several high-profile terrorists, organized crime figures and drug dealers, including the Mexican kingpin known as El Chapo.

Under Bureau of Prison regulations, the government’s jails and prisons must have one or more rooms designed for housing an inmate on suicide watch, and the rooms must allow staff members to control the inmate without comprising their ability to observe and protect him. Every prison facility is required to have a suicide prevention program.

Suicide prevention cells must provide an “unobstructed view of the inmate” and “may not have fixtures or architectural features that would easily allow self-injury,” according to Bureau of Prisons policy.

According to a person familiar with the Bureau of Prison’s procedures, the cells are equipped with video monitoring, which an officer monitors around the clock.

“The whole purpose is, by the time they see you doing something, they’ll get in there and stop it,” the person said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly about Bureau of Prison procedures.

The prison or jail staff members are supposed to operate in shifts to keep the inmate under constant observation and to keep a log of the person’s behavior, according to federal regulations. The inmate is only supposed to be removed from the watch when he or she “is no longer at imminent risk for suicide.”

In many prisons, the program is led by the prison’s chief psychologist, who oversees the treatment of suicidal inmates, according to the Bureau of Prisons suicide prevention strategy.

The Metropolitan Correctional Center houses about 800 people awaiting either trial or sentencing in New York City. Epstein had been held there since his arrest on July 6 on federal charges that he sexually abused and trafficked underage girls in the early 2000s. Judge Richard Berman of U.S. District Court had denied him bail, rejecting his request to be detained at his Upper East Side mansion as he awaited trial.

According to the most recently available statistics from the Justice Department, prison suicides are on the rise nationally, and account for 7% of deaths in prisons nationwide. In 2014, the last year for which the Justice Department has published statistics, 249 inmates committed suicide, a staggering 30% increase after years of inmate suicide rates steadily decreasing.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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