NEWS
“TIME TO SAY GOODBYE” — The Epstein Note They Locked Away and Forgot to Tell You About A missing piece of the story just surfaced… and it changes the timeline. 👉 Read before this gets buried again
BREAKING🚨 A handwritten note allegedly written by Jeffrey Epstein, found in his jail cell weeks before his death, has been sitting sealed in a New York courthouse for nearly 7 years, and federal investigators say they never saw it.
The note was discovered by a fellow inmate after Epstein was found injured in his cell in July 2019 — the first incident. A federal judge sealed it as part of a separate criminal case, and it never entered the official investigation.
The note reportedly included the line “time to say goodbye.” A federal judge sealed it as part of Tartaglione’s own criminal case. That decision meant the Justice Department, FBI, and Inspector General all conducted “exhaustive” investigations into Epstein’s death while a potential piece of evidence about his state of mind sat locked away in a courthouse file, never entering their evidence pile.
For years, we’ve been told the government turned over every stone. DOJ released memos saying Epstein’s death was conclusively ruled a self‑inflicted act. Congress held hearings. Millions of pages of “Epstein files” have now been released under a transparency law. And yet when reporters went looking, that note — which could shed light on how he was thinking in the weeks before he died — wasn’t in the records, and DOJ says it has never seen it.
Instead, we learned it exists from a strange side angle: a two‑page timeline buried in the Tartaglione case that describes how the note got pulled into his legal mess and sealed, and says his lawyers “verified” it was really Epstein’s handwriting — without explaining how.
So you have a note that might be Epstein’s, discovered by the cellmate who later became a key figure in the conspiracy chatter, containing what sounds like a goodbye line, and the system’s response was: seal it in a case about the cellmate, not the man who died in federal custody.
Of course that’s going to pour gasoline on every doubt people already had.
This doesn’t magically prove anything sinister about how Epstein died. DOJ’s own investigations still say self‑inflicted. But it does prove something else: even after a supposed “full accounting,” we’re still finding out there were relevant, potentially important documents that never made it into the official story — because of the way judges, prosecutors, and prison officials handled them in real time.
And it fits the broader pattern.
We watched as cameras “failed,” guards lied on logs, basic procedures broke down, and the one inmate whose death demanded maximum transparency was handled with minimum competence. Now we find out that in this chaos, a possible goodbye note fell into a procedural black hole between one criminal case and another.
The New York Times has now gone to court to unseal the note. The Justice Department says it hasn’t seen it. The public, the survivors of Epstein’s abuse, and even some of his own critics are all stuck in the same place: still asking basic questions seven years later because the system keeps dribbling out key details instead of putting everything on the table at once.
This is why people don’t trust institutions.
Not because every rumor is true, but because time after time, we’re told “that’s it, that’s all,” and then — years later — we find something like a sealed note sitting in a courthouse vault.
You can’t rebuild trust with partial transparency.
Unseal the note. Put it with the rest of the Epstein files. Let experts, survivors, and the public see the same record the government sees — not just the pieces that are convenient.
If they want us to believe the story is finally complete, stop hiding the pages.
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