• What Happened: New DOJ documents reveal Epstein prison guard Tova Noel Googled "latest on Epstein in jail" twice in the 40 minutes before his body was found, and received a mysterious $5,000 cash deposit just 10 days before his death.
  • Why It Matters: Noel previously lied under oath about the searches, falsified prison records, and had her charges dropped anyway — while the FBI never even asked her about the suspicious cash.
  • Bottom Line: Every new document release makes "suicide" harder to believe and the cover-up harder to deny.

Jeffrey Epstein did not kill himself. That is what half of America has been saying since August 10, 2019. And with every new document dump, it gets harder to argue with them.

New DOJ files obtained by the New York Post reveal that Tova Noel, one of the two prison guards assigned to monitor Epstein at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, searched "latest on Epstein in jail" at 5:42 a.m. and again at 5:52 a.m. on the morning of his death. Less than 40 minutes later, her colleague Michael Thomas found Epstein hanging in his cell at 6:30 a.m.

That was not the only red flag.

Chase Bank filed a suspicious activity report with the FBI in November 2019 after flagging a pattern of cash deposits in Noel's account. Records showed 12 deposits beginning in April 2018, with the largest, $5,000, made on July 30, 2019, just 10 days before Epstein's death. 

Noel started working in the Special Housing Unit where Epstein was held on July 7, 2019, just weeks before his death. She was also driving a $62,000 Land Rover Range Rover. The DOJ never asked her about the cash.

When questioned under oath in 2021, Noel denied the Google searches. "I don't remember doing that," she said, adding that the FBI's computer data was not "accurate." 

The FBI also identified Noel as the likely figure caught on surveillance footage near Epstein's cell at 10:40 p.m. the night before his death, appearing to carry orange linens. Epstein was later found hanging with strips of orange cloth. Noel denied delivering linens.

Noel and Thomas were fired, charged with falsifying records, and then had all charges dropped in December 2021 by a federal judge. 

She now works as a medical office assistant in Westchester County, where she has since been sued for alleged assault.

The guards slept. The records were faked. The cash was never explained. The charges were dropped. And the most well-connected pedophile in American history is dead.

Nothing to see here.