Purported Jeffrey Epstein suicide note echoed messages he sent earlier
WASHINGTONΒ βΒ A federal judge in New York unsealed a suicide note Wednesday purportedly written by Jeffrey Epstein in July 2019, before a failed suicide attempt soon after he had been taken into federal custody on sex trafficking charges.
The disgraced financier would ultimately die weeks later in the same New York facility in what was ruled a suicide.
Although the noteβs authenticity has not been established, it contains an apparent reference to a line from a 1931 Little Rascals film that Epstein had used in at least two email messages, according to the trove of Epstein documents released by the U.S. Department of Justice this year in response to the bipartisan Epstein Files Transparency Act.
In the short handwritten note released Wednesday, Epstein allegedly wrote, βThey investigated me for month β Found nuthing!!!β
The note concludes, βWhatcha want me to do β Bust out cryin!! No Fun – Not Worth It!!β
It was a phrase Epstein had used before.
In a September 2016 email to his brother, Mark, he wrote, βwhtchoo want me toodo β bust out cryingβ in response to news that their cousin had become a grandfather.
And in another message the following year to his childhood friend Terry Kafka, Epstein wrote, βWhatcha want me todo/bust out cryin,β in response to a message from Kafka about being nostalgic.
Epsteinβs brother and Kafka did not immediately responded to requests for comment.
The line is an apparent reference to a 1931 Little Rascals short film βLittle Daddy,β in which the character Stymie says, βWell, what do you want me to do, bust out crying?β when another character says that it will be their last breakfast together.
The note emerged from the court records of Epsteinβs onetime cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione, a former police officer who is serving four consecutive life sentences for a 2016 quadruple murder.
It was released in response to a request by the New York Times.
The note was not included in the millions of pages released by the Justice Department.
In 2020, β60 Minutesβ disclosed a note Epstein reportedly wrote days before his August 2019 death that included complaints about his conditions and similarly concluded with the phrase βNo fun!!!β
Journalist Katie Phang sued acting Atty. Gen. Todd Blanche for allegedly failing to comply with the requirements of the Epstein files law passed last year, which required that the documents be released in their entirety within 30 days, with reasoning provided for any documents not released.
The department released the files after the deadline passed and has faced criticism for removing or not releasing some documents and simultaneously failing to redact the names of numerous Epstein victims while redacting the names of some of Epsteinβs friends and associates.