Document EFTA00019402 is a forwarded message regarding the "accidental release" of a serial bank robber, Michael Matthews, from the Metropolitan Correctional Center (MCC) in Manhattan days before Jeffrey Epstein's death.
The document consists of an email chain discussing a Fox News article by Nicole Darrah about Michael Matthews' release from MCC and its proximity to Epstein's apparent suicide. Richard Donoghue, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, stated that Matthews was released despite a permanent detention order. The document highlights the scrutiny surrounding MCC following Epstein's death and irregularities within the facility.

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: To: Subject: Fwd: Metropolitan Correctional Center 'accidentally released' serial bank robber days before Epstein's death Date: Thu, 15 Aug 2019 21:22:04 +0000 Sent from my iPhone Begin forwarded message: From: Date: August 15.2019 at 4:54:20 PM EDT Subject: RE: Metropolitan Correctional Center 'accidentally released' serial bank robber days before Epstein's death ThanksM From: Sent: T ursday. August 15. 2019 4:34 PM To: Subject: Metropolitan Correctional Center 'accidentally released' serial bank robber days before Epstein's death Metropolitan Correctional Center 'accidentally released' serial bank robber days before Epstein's death Fox News By Nicole Darrah 8/15/19 A serial bank robber awaiting sentencing at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan was "accidentally released" from federal custody just days before a series of ignored protocols gave Jeffrey Epstein the opportunity for his apparent suicide. Michael Matthews, 58, was told Aug 7 he was free to leave the New York facility which, in recent days, has come under fire after Epstein, 66, died from an apparent suicide after being left alone in his cell for hours on Saturday — despite recently being on suicide watch, and despite protocol requiring otherwise. Matthews' family told the New York Daily News that a counselor at MCC invited him to their office, where he was given a card to ride the subway and paperwork to sign to be released. lie knew he was awaiting sentencing, scheduled for Sept 20, but didn't speak up. Richard Donoghue, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, stated in a letter obtained by Fox News on Thursday that Matthews — who previously served time for bank robbery — was released, despite being held "pursuant to a permanent order of detention." EFTA00019402
He explains that Matthews was arrested in January after he failed to appear at a halfway house in Brooklyn after being released from a federal facility in New Jersey. He was charged with escaping custody, and was also charged in three bank robberies during the time he was supposed to be in the halfway house, according to prosecutors. "The government is currently seeking additional information about the circumstances prompting the defendant's pre-sentencing release, and sets forth below those facts that the government has confirmed to date," Donoghue wrote. While Matthews surrendered to officials Aug 12, his release further contributes to the scrutiny surrounding the MMC — which houses some of the highest-security inmates in the U.S. - following Epstein's death. Attorney General William Barr vowed on Monday a full investigation into the federal prison. He said he was "appalled... and frankly, angry to learn of MCC's failure to adequately secure this prisoner." "We are now learning of serious irregularities at this facility that are deeply concerning and demand a thorough investigation." Epstein, who was found with bruising on his neck in his cell last month, had been taken off suicide watch shortly before his death, according to a source familiar with the matter. Per protocol, the 66-year-old should've been checked on every 30 minutes, but before his death had not been physically checked on for "several hours." Additionally, he didn't have a cellmate on the night of his death. A lawyer for one of Epstein's former cellmates, Nicholas Tartaglione, a former police officer in New York who was charged in 2016 with the deaths of four men stemming from an alleged cocaine conspiracy, told Fox News earlier this week he's had several clients who have been locked up both in New York City's notorious Rikers Island jail and MCC, and claimed many have said they "would rather be at Bikers." "That gives you some idea how bad the place is," the lawyer, Bruce Barket said. "At the end of the day, the facility is run with a bad combination of laziness and cruelty and this is one of the results." He described conditions at MCC "border on inhumane," and said one day, when Tartaglione woke up, he discovered that while sleeping he'd rolled onto a rodent, smothering it. Separately, a representative from the American Federation of Government Employees/Council of Prison Locals decried the low staff levels at MCC, but also said the issue is a "system-wide crisis in our prison system." EFTA00019403


