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“As you now know, I took the ‘short route’ home,” Epstein wrote in the purported letter, appearing to refer to his later death by suicide. “Good luck! We shared one thing…our love and care for young women and the hope that they would reach their full potential. Our president also shared our love of nubile young girls. When a young beauty passed by, he loved to ‘catch the snatch’, while we ended up stealing food from the dining halls of the system. Life is unfair,” he continued, signing it “J. Epstein.”

Ministry of Justice

The government also published a envelope imagewhich was addressed by Epstein to “inmate” Nassar, and was postmarked on August 13, 2019, three days after Epstein’s death at the Metropolitan Correction Center in New York. The letter, marked return to sender, was addressed to Nassar at USP Arizonawhere the high-profile pedophile had been held before his arrest. transferred in 2018.

Return envelope to sender
Ministry of Justice

Probably recognizing the harm that the authenticity of this letter would cause the president, the Justice Department announced quickly
Tuesday morning that they would investigate its legitimacy. Less than two hours later, they said the FBI concluded the note was a “FALSE”, citing handwriting, postmark date and incorrect return address format for inmates. However, the DOJ did not choose to publish the results of the handwritten analysis initially obtained in July 2020, even though establishing its authenticity would have been relevant to a potential wrongful death suit based on Epstein’s in-custody death.

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