poor sad pedo jeffy. strange last days. 
Epstein's  last days were spent emptying vending machines with his lawyers in a  private meeting room, avoiding suicide watch, and paying other inmates'  commissaries
https://news.yahoo.com/epsteins-last...135644803.html
Kat Tenbarge
  Business Insider•August 17, 2019
Associated Press
The mysterious circumstances surrounding the 
death by suicide of accused sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein while in federal custody 
have infuriated the Attorney General, incited the president 
to spread a baseless conspiracy theory, and 
intrigued the public.
The New York Times investigated what really happened to Jeffrey Epstein behind bars at the 
Metropolitan Correctional Center in  lower Manhattan, where the convicted sex offender continued to use his  wealth to advantage himself, even while held without bail on charges of  sex trafficking minors and conspiracy.
Epstein's cell was cramped, musty, and likely infested with vermin, based 
on interviews with  lawyers and other MCC inmates, and the financier may have encountered  standing water, with overflowing urine and feces from the facility's  faulty plumbing.
To avoid spending time in his cell, 
Epstein paid for  lawyers, including but not limited to his own established legal team,  to spend up to 12 hours a day consulting with him in a private meeting  room. During their visits, Epstein and his lawyers 
repeatedly emptied nearby vending machines.
Read more: Jeffrey  Epstein's lawyers blast 'medieval conditions' at federal jail where he  died by suicide and say they are launching their own investigation
Epstein also 
deposited money in  other inmates' commissary funds to avoid negative attention, a  consultant who regularly speaks with MCC inmates told The New York  Times. Despite the measures he took to improve his own conditions,  Epstein still 
seemed miserable, bathing infrequently, leaving his hair and beard unkempt, and sometimes sleeping on the floor instead of in his bunk.
Concerning his first apparent suicide attempt, five days after US District Judge Richard Berman 
denied him bail, 
The New York Times reported that  Epstein was placed on suicide watch for six days. The short watch  period is not irregular at MCC, which joins the ranks of other federal  prisons that have faced dire 
understaffing crises under the Trump administration's policy to 
reduce the size of the federal government.
In fact, three days after being removed from suicide watch, Epstein met with attorney David Schoen, who 
told The New York Times that  the financier appeared upbeat, and invited Schoen to join his legal  team. In the days that followed, lawyers and prison staff say Epstein  began 
looking haggard and sleeping on the floor again.
The day before Epstein's death, a 
trove of documents concerning his sex trafficking operation was released to the public, and he and his lawyers 
crowded into the private meeting room for hours. That night, mismanagement and lack of correctional officers meant that only 18 guards 
watched over 750 inmates, and 10 of them were working overtime, while one post remained vacant.
Reuters
Of the 
two guards meant to monitor Epstein every 30 minutes, one was a former correctional officer and was volunteering. The two 
failed to check in on him for a 3-hour period, during which two Bureau of Prisons officials say they 
fell asleep and later falsified records.
During that time, Epstein successfully hanged himself with a bed sheet, and while prison staff attempted 
to revive him early  that morning, he was pronounced dead at a nearby hospital an hour after  being discovered. His cell in the 9 South block had a small window,  from which Epstein may have been able 
to spot his two guards sleeping at the nearby guard desk.
Epstein's lawyers have released 
a statement announcing another investigation into his suicide, joining 
three investigations being  performed by the Southern District of New York, where Epstein was  charged, the Office of the Inspector General, under Attorney General 
William Barr, and the FBI.
The coroner's report concerning Epstein's death shows he was able 
to fracture his hyoid, a small U-shaped neck bone, while hanging himself. Despite the prevailing 
conspiracy theory that Epstein was murdered, 
FBI agents discounted the narrative, 
medical experts said the fracture was self-inflicted, and former 
federal prosecutors said any motive for murdering the financier would be misguided.
Rather, 
The New York Times suggested that  Epstein had reached the end of the benefits his enormous wealth could  grant him and saw no way out from the conditions inside MCC, 
which lacked the workforce to ensure his safety, 
not unlike federal prisons across the country.