Jeffrey Epstein’s Barely Legible Alleged Suicide Note Revealed: ‘Time to say goodbye’
By New York Post. Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged suicide note was finally revealed — and the convicted pedophile appears to claim investigators “found nothing” on him.
“They investigated for month — found nothing!!!” read the barely legible note, released by a New York court order Wednesday in response to a New York Times petition.
“So 16 year old charge results!” the note appeared to read. “It is a treat to be able to choose one’s time to say goodbye.”
An apparent suicide note written in 2019 by the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was released Wednesday.
A U.S. district judge ordered the release of the document at the request of The New York Times.
The note had been submitted to the court in May 2021 as part of… pic.twitter.com/PpSUEXcbEA
— CBS News (@CBSNews) May 7, 2026
Tartaglione’s lawyer claimed the note was later verified as being written by Epstein, according to the Times.
Epstein succeeded in killing himself in August 2019, the month after the note was supposedly written for the initial attempt. (Read more from “Jeffrey Epstein’s Barely Legible Alleged Suicide Note Revealed: ‘Time to say goodbye’” HERE)
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How an apparent Jeffrey Epstein suicide note ended up in the hands of his quadruple-murderer roommate
By Business Insider. It was a crucial document that wasn’t included in the Epstein files: a suicide note apparently written by Jeffrey Epstein himself.
The purported note, which was made public on Wednesday by a federal judge in New York, was written in handwriting that appears to match other writing from the notorious pedophile. . .
The note did not come from the Justice Department. Nor did it emerge from a congressional investigation into Epstein, nor from one of the many lawsuits surrounding Epstein’s estate.
Instead, it came in a court proceeding related to Epstein’s onetime jail roommate, a former police officer who was convicted of a quadruple murder in 2023.
The cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione, said he found the note after Epstein’s first apparent suicide attempt in Manhattan jail, on July 23, 2019. (Read more from “How an apparent Jeffrey Epstein suicide note ended up in the hands of his quadruple-murderer roommate” HERE)


