Jeffrey Epstein didn’t have a ‘client list,’ and committed suicide, DOJ and FBI say in findings that debunk conspiracy theories: report

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Notorious sex predator Jeffrey Epstein didn’t keep a supposed “client list,” and he was not murdered during his short-lived stay in a Manhattan lockup, the Justice Department and FBI reportedly concluded in a joint probe.

The investigation, the results of which were detailed in a memo obtained by Axios, also found no evidence that Epstein “blackmailed prominent individuals.”

The Trump administration plans to release a video to prove their findings on Epstein’s 2019 death, which bred slews of conspiracy theories.

“He’s the only person in there and the only person coming out. You can see it,” FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said in late May. 

The video falls in line with the medical examiner’s assessment post-mortem that Epstein committed suicide, according to the memo.

The medical examiner’s conclusions were contested by Epstein’s surviving family, who turned to a forensic pathologist that determined a homicide was far more probable based on the evidence. 

No one else involved in the Epstein case will face charges, according to the memo, beyond his associate Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving 20 years for child sex trafficking and other related crimes. 

President Trump previously promised to release the apparently debunked “client list” during his reelection campaign.

Trump has asserted that he had never visited Epstein’s notorious private island, where scores of underaged girls and young women were allegedly abused. 

But the president has said “a lot of people did” – that he was willing to unmask. 

Back in February, Trump’s DOJ released Epstein’s contact list as part of a long-awaited trove of documents connected to the sex notorious sex predator.

Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, Alec Baldwin and Mick Jagger were among the high-profile names on Epstein’s contact list. 

But the hyped-up February release was panned by critics as little to no new information about Epstein’s case was divulged. 

Epstein’s demise just 36 days into his stay at Metropolitan Correctional Center has been the source of rampant conspiracy theories for nearly a decade, including rumors that some of the rich and famous he had incriminating information on arranged for him to be murdered. 

The disgraced mogul first pleaded guilty in 2008 for soliciting underage sex and was placed on the sex offenders list. 

Epstein served just 13 months of an 18-month sentence in a county jail where he only spent one day a week physically at the facility and the other six out on “work release.” 

In 2014, Virginia Giuffre alleged in a sworn affidavit that she was sex trafficked and even used as a “sex slave” for years by Epstein and Maxwell for their own use and for others’, including Prince Andrew, which the former royal continues to deny today. 

Giuffre’s bombshell accusation opened the floodgates for other victims to speak out. 

When Epstein was found dead in 2019, he was awaiting trial on a slew of sex-trafficking charges.

The Post reached out to the DOJ for comment.

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