Epstein suicide note release revives questions over his 2019 jail death, cellmate claims, security failures and unanswered doubts.
Epstein suicide note claims have once again thrown intense public attention onto the 2019 death of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.
A purported handwritten note, released on May 6 and 7, 2026, was unsealed following a request by The New York Times. The single-page document was released by United States District Judge Kenneth M. Karas.
The note had earlier been legally sealed as part of a criminal case involving Nicholas Tartaglione, the former police officer who once shared a cell with Epstein.
Written almost illegibly on a yellow legal pad, the note states that although he had been investigated for months, nothing had been found. It then says charges had been brought over events from 15 or 16 years earlier.
The note further expresses satisfaction that he could choose his own time to depart. It questions whether they expected him to cry and underlines the words “NO FUN — NOT WORTH IT!!”
However, the authenticity of the note has not been verified by the court, The New York Times, the Department of Justice, or medical examiners.
The DOJ has also stated that it had never seen the note until it was recently made public.
The discovery of the document is linked to statements made by Epstein’s former cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione.
Tartaglione claimed that he found the note hidden inside a coloring book in their shared cell sometime after Epstein’s alleged suicide attempt at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan on July 23, 2019.
He said he had administered CPR to Epstein after he was found with a bedsheet around his neck. Tartaglione later claimed to have discovered the note and handed it to his attorneys around May 2021, nearly two years later.
There is now intense debate over Tartaglione’s credibility.
A former police officer accused of murdering four people, Tartaglione was convicted in 2023 over a 2016 drug-related quadruple homicide. In 2024, he was sentenced to four consecutive life sentences.
He continues to appeal the conviction and maintains his innocence.
In several interviews, Tartaglione has said he saved Epstein’s life and claimed Epstein had shared secrets about powerful individuals with him. However, his criminal background has raised serious doubts about the reliability of his claims.
With the release of the note, Epstein’s death and the theories surrounding it have returned to public debate.
Epstein was arrested in July 2019 on charges of sex trafficking minors. He was found dead in his cell on August 10 of the same year.
The New York City Medical Examiner ruled the death a suicide by hanging.
Yet several serious security failures have continued to fuel public suspicion. These include guards failing to conduct required checks, malfunctioning security cameras, Epstein’s removal from suicide watch, and missing CCTV footage.
The newly released note is likely to intensify those doubts further.
Epstein’s links to politicians, celebrities, and royalty mean this latest revelation will almost certainly deepen the public questions that have surrounded his death for years.
