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Chapter 1: Introduction
The Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) is a component of the Department of Justice (DOJ) that operates 122 institutions across the United States. According to its website, the BOP's current mission statement is "Corrections professionals who foster a humane and secure environment and ensure public safety by preparing individuals for successful reentry into our communities." However, the DOJ Office of the Inspector General (OIG) has issued numerous reports over more than a decade identifying long-standing operational challenges facing the BOP that have negatively affected its ability to operate its institutions safely and securely. Those reports have contained dozens of recommendations to the BOP. As we detail in this report, many of those same operational challenges and systemic issues, including significant staffing shortages, providing appropriate custody and care of inmates at risk for suicide, the absence of functional security camera systems, and management failures and widespread disregard of BOP policies and procedures, were once again identified by the OIG during the course of this investigation and review into the custody, care, and supervision of one of the BOP's most notorious inmates, Jeffrey Epstein. We therefore make further recommendations to the BOP in the conclusion of this report to help it address these recurring issues.
The OIG initiated this investigation upon the receipt of information from the BOP that on the morning of August 10, 2019, in the Metropolitan Correctional Center located in New York, New York (MCC New York), inmate Jeffery Epstein was found hanged in his assigned cell within the Special Housing Unit (SHU). The SHU is a housing unit where inmates are securely separated from the general inmate population and kept locked in their cells for approximately 23 hours a day, to ensure their own safety as well as the safety of staff and other inmates. Epstein had been placed in the SHU on July 7, 2019, the day after his arrest, due to the significant media coverage of his case and awareness of his notoriety among MCC New York inmates.
According to information obtained by the OIG during the investigation, at approximately 8 p.m. on August 9, all SHU inmates, including Epstein, were locked in their cells for the evening. Additionally, the six separate tiers or groups of cells within the SHU were also securely locked. At approximately 6:30 a.m. on August 10, 2019, SHU staff unlocked the door to the SHU tier in which Epstein's cell was located in order to deliver breakfast to inmates through the food slots in the locked cell doors. When SHU staff entered the tier to deliver breakfast to Epstein, SHU staff knocked on the locked door to Epstein's cell. Epstein, who was housed alone in the cell, did not respond to SHU staff. SHU staff unlocked the cell door and found Epstein hanged in his cell, with one end of a piece of orange cloth around his neck and the other end tied to the top portion of a bunkbed in Epstein's cell. Epstein was suspended from the top bunk in a near-seated position with his buttocks approximately 1 inch to 1 and a half off the floor and his legs extended straight out on the floor in front of him. Epstein's cell contained an excess amount of prison linens, as well as multiple nooses that had been made from torn prison linens.
SHU staff immediately activated a body alarm, which notified all MCC New York staff of a medical emergency and prompted MCC New York staff assigned to the Control Center to call for 911 emergency services. SHU staff then ripped the orange cloth away from the bunkbed, which caused Epstein's buttocks to drop to the ground. SHU staff laid Epstein on the ground and immediately initiated cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). At approximately 6:33 a.m., other MCC New York employees responded to the SHU. A responding MCC New York Lieutenant took over administering CPR and asked SHU staff to retrieve an automated external defibrillator and call for the duty nurse. A Clinical Nurse responded and continued to perform CPR on Epstein in the place of the Lieutenant. At approximately 6:39 a.m., Epstein was placed on a stretcher and