Now it makes a lot more sense. A few hours later, the DOJ posted the image of a handwritten letter signed by “J. Epstein,” which was sent to convicted sex offender Larry Nassar in 2019. The letter, which is postmarked three days after Epstein died in prison, seems to allude to Epstein’s plans to end his life, and accuses Trump of sharing their love of “young, nubile girls.”Some of these documents contain untrue and sensationalist claims made against President Trump that were submitted to the FBI right before the 2020 election. To be clear: the claims are unfounded and false, and if they had a shred of credibility, they certainly would have been weaponized against President Trump already.
We’ve known about the existence of this purported letter from Epstein to Nassar for years. In 2023, the AP published a report on more than 4,000 pages of Epstein-related documents obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request to the federal Bureau of Prisons. The letter itself was not included in the documents, but the AP did find correspondence between prison officials debating what to do with it:Dear L.N.
As you know by now, I have taken the “short route” home. Good luck! We shared one thing … our love and caring for young ladies and the hope they’d reach their full potential.
Our president also shares our love of young, nubile girls. When a young beauty walked by he loved to “grab snatch,” whereas we ended up snatching grub in the mess halls of the system.
Life is unfair.
Yours
J. Epstein
Larry Nassar, the former U.S. gymnastics team doctor, was convicted of abusing many young female athletes and sentenced to prison in January 2018. It’s unclear if Epstein and Nassar knew each other.Epstein’s letter to Nassar was found returned to sender in the jail’s mail room weeks after Epstein’s death. “It appeared he mailed it out and it was returned back to him,” the investigator who found the letter told a prison official by email. “I am not sure if I should open it or should we hand it over to anyone?”
This just gets better and better. LOLDid Epstein Really Send Larry Nassar a Suicide Note?
![]()
Photo: Rick Friedman/Corbis via Getty Images
The new batch of Epstein files released in recent days didn’t contain anything that explosive. We saw some new shirtless photos of Bill Clinton, added a few more names to the list of Epstein’s associates, and learned that Donald Trump may have taken more flights on the late sex offender’s plane than we realized. So it seemed a bit weird that the Justice Department posted this statement to X on Tuesday morning, vaguely warning that you can’t believe everything you read in its latest document dump:
Now it makes a lot more sense. A few hours later, the DOJ posted the image of a handwritten letter signed by “J. Epstein,” which was sent to convicted sex offender Larry Nassar in 2019. The letter, which is postmarked three days after Epstein died in prison, seems to allude to Epstein’s plans to end his life, and accuses Trump of sharing their love of “young, nubile girls.”
Soooo … did the Justice Department just unceremoniously drop an Epstein suicide note that suggests the president was involved in his crimes?
Big if true! But it’s hard to know what to make of the letter, there is significant reason to doubt its legitimacy, and now the DOJ claims it’s “fake.”
Here’s the image:
![]()
And here’s the full text:
We’ve known about the existence of this purported letter from Epstein to Nassar for years. In 2023, the AP published a report on more than 4,000 pages of Epstein-related documents obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request to the federal Bureau of Prisons. The letter itself was not included in the documents, but the AP did find correspondence between prison officials debating what to do with it:
Larry Nassar, the former U.S. gymnastics team doctor, was convicted of abusing many young female athletes and sentenced to prison in January 2018. It’s unclear if Epstein and Nassar knew each other.
The letter was addressed to Nassar at a prison facility in Arizona. A chain of custody log says it was found in a mail room on September 29, 2019. The envelope says it was returned to sender, with the explanation that Nasser was “no longer at this address.”
Epstein was found dead on August 10, 2019 and the letter was postmarked August 13, 2019. The envelope also has a Northern Virginia postmark, while Epstein was being held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan.
![]()
Both the posthumous mailing and the postmark may be explained by the peculiarities of the prison mail system. As CNN explained: “Prison staff are authorized to read and inspect outgoing mail, which can cause delays. It’s not clear why Epstein’s letter was permitted by prison officials to be sent and why it was delayed.”
Hours after the document was posted, the DOJ noted these discrepancies and said it was “currently looking into the validity of the letter”:
![]()
Another document posted on Tuesday reveals that the FBI asked its handwriting analysis laboratory to examine the Epstein note in 2020:
![]()
But the documents released so far do not say if the analysis was ever performed, or what it concluded.
Later on Tuesday, the DOJ announced that the letter is “FAKE,” without providing any documentation to back up this claim, or explaining how this forgery ended up in the Epstein files:
![]()
So what’s going on here? The case for the letter’s validity is that the FBI took the letter seriously enough to ask for further analysis, and the discrepancies in the date and location on the letter are explainable. Also, we know Epstein was behaving erratically while in prison, to the point that he was put on suicide watch. And recently released emails show Epstein frequently talked about his former friend as he ascended to the White House. He even said of Trump in one email, “Of course he knew about the girls as he asked Ghislaine to stop.”
On the other hand, it seems a little too tidy that Epstein penned a note that answers two major questions about this scandal — Did Epstein really commit suicide? Was Trump involved in his abuse of girls? — in just a few lines. Then this explosive letter was lost in the mail for weeks, and only became public years later? It wouldn’t have been hard for someone to write this letter as a sick joke on August 10, 2019, and drop it in the mail in Northern Virginia, with MCC listed as the return address.
All we can say for sure: we’ll probably never know if the note is real, so it will just be added to the ever-growing pile of Epstein conspiracy theory fodder. And Trump’s bumbling Justice Department probably should have started “looking into the validity of this alleged letter” a long time ago, rather than dumping it online and assuming there would be no follow-up questions.
is this that MOssad blackmail operation everyone keeps talking about?Did Epstein Really Send Larry Nassar a Suicide Note?
![]()
Photo: Rick Friedman/Corbis via Getty Images
The new batch of Epstein files released in recent days didn’t contain anything that explosive. We saw some new shirtless photos of Bill Clinton, added a few more names to the list of Epstein’s associates, and learned that Donald Trump may have taken more flights on the late sex offender’s plane than we realized. So it seemed a bit weird that the Justice Department posted this statement to X on Tuesday morning, vaguely warning that you can’t believe everything you read in its latest document dump:
Now it makes a lot more sense. A few hours later, the DOJ posted the image of a handwritten letter signed by “J. Epstein,” which was sent to convicted sex offender Larry Nassar in 2019. The letter, which is postmarked three days after Epstein died in prison, seems to allude to Epstein’s plans to end his life, and accuses Trump of sharing their love of “young, nubile girls.”
Soooo … did the Justice Department just unceremoniously drop an Epstein suicide note that suggests the president was involved in his crimes?
Big if true! But it’s hard to know what to make of the letter, there is significant reason to doubt its legitimacy, and now the DOJ claims it’s “fake.”
Here’s the image:
![]()
And here’s the full text:
We’ve known about the existence of this purported letter from Epstein to Nassar for years. In 2023, the AP published a report on more than 4,000 pages of Epstein-related documents obtained via a Freedom of Information Act request to the federal Bureau of Prisons. The letter itself was not included in the documents, but the AP did find correspondence between prison officials debating what to do with it:
Larry Nassar, the former U.S. gymnastics team doctor, was convicted of abusing many young female athletes and sentenced to prison in January 2018. It’s unclear if Epstein and Nassar knew each other.
The letter was addressed to Nassar at a prison facility in Arizona. A chain of custody log says it was found in a mail room on September 29, 2019. The envelope says it was returned to sender, with the explanation that Nasser was “no longer at this address.”
Epstein was found dead on August 10, 2019 and the letter was postmarked August 13, 2019. The envelope also has a Northern Virginia postmark, while Epstein was being held at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan.
![]()
Both the posthumous mailing and the postmark may be explained by the peculiarities of the prison mail system. As CNN explained: “Prison staff are authorized to read and inspect outgoing mail, which can cause delays. It’s not clear why Epstein’s letter was permitted by prison officials to be sent and why it was delayed.”
Hours after the document was posted, the DOJ noted these discrepancies and said it was “currently looking into the validity of the letter”:
![]()
Another document posted on Tuesday reveals that the FBI asked its handwriting analysis laboratory to examine the Epstein note in 2020:
![]()
But the documents released so far do not say if the analysis was ever performed, or what it concluded.
Later on Tuesday, the DOJ announced that the letter is “FAKE,” without providing any documentation to back up this claim, or explaining how this forgery ended up in the Epstein files:
![]()
So what’s going on here? The case for the letter’s validity is that the FBI took the letter seriously enough to ask for further analysis, and the discrepancies in the date and location on the letter are explainable. Also, we know Epstein was behaving erratically while in prison, to the point that he was put on suicide watch. And recently released emails show Epstein frequently talked about his former friend as he ascended to the White House. He even said of Trump in one email, “Of course he knew about the girls as he asked Ghislaine to stop.”
On the other hand, it seems a little too tidy that Epstein penned a note that answers two major questions about this scandal — Did Epstein really commit suicide? Was Trump involved in his abuse of girls? — in just a few lines. Then this explosive letter was lost in the mail for weeks, and only became public years later? It wouldn’t have been hard for someone to write this letter as a sick joke on August 10, 2019, and drop it in the mail in Northern Virginia, with MCC listed as the return address.
All we can say for sure: we’ll probably never know if the note is real, so it will just be added to the ever-growing pile of Epstein conspiracy theory fodder. And Trump’s bumbling Justice Department probably should have started “looking into the validity of this alleged letter” a long time ago, rather than dumping it online and assuming there would be no follow-up questions.
You always manage to be patheticis this that MOssad blackmail operation everyone keeps talking about?
is it?You always manage to be pathetic
It's certainly splitting itself over both the Nazi and Pedophile issues.Trump is totally fucked
Maga is dead
Soon the racists will be crawling down into the sewer where they belong
Yesis it?
They are splitting themselves over a power grapIt's certainly splitting itself over both the Nazi and Pedophile issues.
stay tuned.Yes
It is pathetic
I just can’t wait to see who’s cock you wrap your thin, slimy lips onto next
It’s the only interesting thing about you
Ooops.
it's another version of globalism v. anti-globalism.It's certainly splitting itself over both the Nazi and Pedophile issues.
Most of the JPP MAGAts seem to swap BJs with each other. They post about it all the time.Yes
It is pathetic
I just can’t wait to see who’s cock you wrap your thin, slimy lips onto next
It’s the only interesting thing about you
Pucker up fuckerstay tuned.
Please contribute handsomely to the forum to keep the high quality content rolling.
by mennen.
you ain't gonna do shit.Pucker up fucker
you're blowing Benjamin netanyahuYes
It is pathetic
I just can’t wait to see who’s cock you wrap your thin, slimy lips onto next
It’s the only interesting thing about you
The MAGAts, yes, but the Christian Republicans not so much. The Charlie Kirk memorial service was the first major sign of this split. The TPUSA conference also indicated the lines of division in the movement.They are splitting themselves over a power grap
They are all want to be Nazis and pedo protecting
all your made up categories make you look like an idiot.The MAGAts, yes, but the Christian Republicans not so much. The Charlie Kirk memorial service was the first major sign of this split. The TPUSA conference also indicated the lines of division in the movement.