DEVELOPING:
1. On August 15, 2019, Washington Post announced the bones that were broken in Jeffrey Epstein’s neck was ‘more typical in homicide by strangulation’ opposed to suicide.
2. On August 28, 2019 it was reported that the two cameras outside of Epstein’s cell had malfunctioned before his death.
3. On January 6, 2020, Dr Michael Baden the family pathologist who was hired by Jeffrey Epstein's brother Mark to oversee Jeffrey Epstein’s second autopsy claimed that the alleged noose didn’t match wound on neck which proved that he was murdered after new autopsy.
We are going to learn more about this entire scenario in the coming days.
1. On August 15, 2019, Washington Post announced the bones that were broken in Jeffrey Epstein’s neck was ‘more typical in homicide by strangulation’ opposed to suicide.
2. On August 28, 2019 it was reported that the two cameras outside of Epstein’s cell had malfunctioned before his death.
3. On January 6, 2020, Dr Michael Baden the family pathologist who was hired by Jeffrey Epstein's brother Mark to oversee Jeffrey Epstein’s second autopsy claimed that the alleged noose didn’t match wound on neck which proved that he was murdered after new autopsy.
We are going to learn more about this entire scenario in the coming days.
DEVELOPING:
1. On August 15, 2019, Washington Post announced the bones that were broken in Jeffrey Epstein’s neck was ‘more typical in homicide by strangulation’ opposed to suicide.
2. On August 28, 2019 it was reported that the two cameras outside of Epstein’s cell had malfunctioned before his death.
3. On January 6, 2020, Dr Michael Baden the family pathologist who was hired by Jeffrey Epstein's brother Mark to oversee Jeffrey Epstein’s second autopsy claimed that the alleged noose didn’t match wound on neck which proved that he was murdered after new autopsy.
We are going to learn more about this entire scenario in the coming days.
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