Surveillance footage from Jeffrey Epstein’s final night has exposed significant discrepancies in official explanations regarding missing video segments from the convicted financier’s prison cell.
The Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn recorded footage from August 9, 2019, which the Justice Department initially released in July. However, investigators discovered the 11-hour video contained a suspicious one-minute gap occurring just before midnight.
Technical analysis revealed the footage had been assembled from multiple video segments using Adobe Premiere Pro editing software.
This discovery raised immediate questions about the integrity of the surveillance record from Epstein’s final hours.
Attorney General Pam Bondi previously attributed the missing minute to standard prison surveillance system operations.
She stated that the Bureau of Prisons routinely processes video footage nightly, claiming every night should contain the same missing minute.
The House Oversight Committee has now released the previously missing minute as part of two hours of additional footage made public on Tuesday, Resist the Mainstream reported.
This release occurred during the committee’s investigation into potential ethics violations among elected officials.
Committee members met with survivors of Epstein’s alleged abuse on the same day the additional footage became available.
The closed-door session produced emotional reactions from several Republican representatives.
Rep. Nancy
