Document EFTA00009966 appears to be an email chain regarding an article in the Daily News about Jeffrey Epstein's former cellmate, Nick Tartaglione, insisting he "never touched the man".
The email forwards a news article from September 12, 2019, in which Nick Tartaglione, who shared a cell with Jeffrey Epstein, claims he did not harm Epstein and that he was placed in the cell specifically because he posed no threat to him. The article mentions Tartaglione's prior occupation as a Briarcliff Manor cop and that he was facing the death penalty for a quadruple murder. It also references Epstein's first attempted suicide in July 2019, while sharing a cell with Tartaglione, and that Tartaglione may have alerted jail staff. The document includes a URL linking to a CBS News article about Epstein's donations to Harvard University.

Perversion of Justice: The Jeffrey Epstein Story
Julie K. Brown
Investigative journalism that broke the Epstein case open

Filthy Rich: The Jeffrey Epstein Story
James Patterson
Bestselling account of Epstein's crimes and network

Relentless Pursuit: My Fight for the Victims of Jeffrey Epstein
Bradley J. Edwards
Victims' attorney's firsthand account
From: ' (USANYS)" To: ' (USANYS Cc: ' (USANYS) [Contractor]" Subject: RE: 'I never touched the man,' Jeffrey Epstein's former cellmate insists in letter to Daily News Date: Fri, 13 Sep 2019 18:11:39 +0000 https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeffrey-epstein-donated-8-9-million-to-harvard-university ys/ From: (USANYS) Sent: Friday, September 13, 2019 1:49 PM To: (USANYS) (USANYS) cfl c M -> Cc: (USANYS) [Contractor) ; (USANYS) < > Subject: 'I never touched the man,' Jeffrey Epstein's former cellmate insists in letter to Daily News never touched the man,' Jeffrey Epstein's former cellmate insists in letter to Daily News NY Daily News By Stephen Rex Brown 9/12/19 Jeffrey Epstein's former cellmate proclaimed "I never touched the man" in a letter to the Daily News Thursday as a probe into the multimillionaire perv's suicide continues. Nick Tartaglione, a former Briarcliff Manor cop facing the death penalty for quadruple murder, insisted in a two- page handwritten note that he shared a cell at Metropolitan Correctional Center with Epstein because he posed no threat to the accused sex trafficker of underage girls. "As far as Jeff Epstein is concerned, I never touched the man. I despise anyone who hurts children but whatever was going to happen to him, I was not going to be a part of it," Tartglione, 51, wrote from an 8-by-10-foot cell he called The Box. "The prison told Epstein they were putting him in a cell with me because they knew I would neither hurt nor extort him. The staff here at MCC had hundreds of inmates to choose from yet I was their first choice," Tartglione wrote. Epstein's first attempted suicide on July 23 in the cell he shared with Tartaglione. Sources previously told The News that Tartaglione believed he may have saved Epstein's life by quickly alerting jail staff to the attempted hanging. [More New York] State comptroller's annual MTA finance review warns of possible layoffs, growing budget gaps » Epstein, 66, was moved to suicide watch, separating him from Tartaglione. Sources said at the time that investigators were trying to determine whether Tartaglione had assaulted Epstein. EFTA00009966
The sex offender was subsequently taken off of suicide watch and hanged himself on Aug. 10 in a cell he occupied alone. He was awaiting trial on charges that carried a maximum sentence of 45 years in prison. "At or around the time of his death we did not see a despairing or despondent person," Epstein's attorney Reid Weingarten said at a recent hearing for the financier's victims. The probe of how the pent with powerful friends managed to kill himself includes an examination of the first attempt, prosecutors have said in court. Tartaglione's attorney Bruce Barket said he has not been interviewed by investigators since Epstein's death. "(Tartaglione) has not been questioned by any law enforcement official since July 23," Barket said. "I can't imagine how they can claim a complete investigation without speaking to the person who was in the cell in that first event." A spokesman for the Southern District of New York declined comment. Attorney General William Barr said "irregularities" have been uncovered at the nightmarish lockup. The jail staff on duty at the time of Epstein's hanging were reportedly exhausted from working multiple overtime shifts and failed to follow protocol. The MCC is also coping with longstanding staff shortages. "I still have some faith in the justice system," Tartaglione wrote. "Every person in this country has the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty. To anyone who reads this I only ask for that presumption because I haven't felt it yet in the past 33 months." Tartaglione, who has long complained about conditions at MCC, is seeking to be transferred to another federal lockup due to threats he says were made by jail staff after Epstein's suicide. "It just doesn't seem appropriate that he be housed and guarded by the very people who are under investigation given his proximity to the investigation," Barket said at a recent hearing. "My client shouldn't have to fear for his life." [More New York] Man found wrapped in a carpet was shot before being tossed outside Harlem Starbucks: cops » The attorney said he did not know his client had sent the letter until after it was in the mail. "It's a product of the frustration at the entire situation," Barket said. The musclebound ex-cop is charged with killing Martin Luna, 41, Hector Santiago, 32, Miguel Luna, 25, and Hector Gutierrez, 43, in April 2016, as well as conspiring to distribute over five kilos of cocaine. Prosecutors say two of the victims had ties to a Mexican drug cartel. The four men's bodies were found buried on Tartaglione's sprawling animal rescue farm in Otisville, Orange County. Tartaglione has been locked up since December 2016 and still does not have a trial date. EFTA00009967








