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Medical Examiner Kathleen Liggo And Her Epstein Investigation Report (3/10/26)

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Kathleen Liggio, a senior investigator with the New York City Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, prepared an investigative report documenting the scene findings and physical evidence surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s death inside the Special Housing Unit of the Metropolitan Correctional Center on August 10, 2019. Her investigation focused on reconstructing the conditions inside the cell and the physical circumstances in which Epstein was discovered. The report described Epstein being found unresponsive in a seated or kneeling position near the lower bunk with a ligature fashioned from a bedsheet tied to the bunk frame. Liggio documented the condition of the cell, the bedding materials used in the hanging, and the absence of evidence indicating a violent struggle within the confined space. The investigative summary also noted that the ligature marks on Epstein’s neck were consistent with the type of suspension observed in hangings involving improvised materials such as torn bedding. Photographic documentation, scene measurements, and evidence collection were conducted as part of the investigation, and the information was forwarded to the forensic pathologist responsible for the autopsy determination. Liggio’s role was primarily to document the death scene and gather the physical evidence that would inform the medical examiner’s final ruling regarding cause and manner of death.

The investigative findings described in Liggio’s report supported the medical examiner’s determination that Epstein died from suicidal hanging. The report reviewed injuries identified during the autopsy, including fractures of structures in the neck, and concluded that these injuries were consistent with the mechanics of hanging, particularly in older individuals where such fractures can occur more readily. Liggio also documented the lack of defensive injuries, the positioning of the ligature, and the availability of bedding materials within the cell that could be used to construct the hanging device. Her findings did not identify physical evidence suggesting the involvement of another individual inside the cell at the time of death. The report therefore concluded that the scene evidence, autopsy findings, and investigative observations were all consistent with a self-inflicted hanging while Epstein was alone in his housing unit. While the report addressed the forensic reconstruction of the death scene, it did not evaluate the operational failures within the prison that allowed Epstein to remain unmonitored for extended periods prior to his death.



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source:

EFTA00063517.pdf


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