Transcript
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A single page of lined notebook paper, yellow legal pad, handwritten, no date, no signature. And it says, they investigated me for months, found nothing. So 15 year old charges resulted. It is a treat to be able to choose one's time to say goodbye. What you want me to do? Burst out crying? No fun, not worth it. That's the whole thing. Federal investigators never saw that note. It wasn't in any of the government's internal reports on Jeffrey Epstein's death. It wasn't in the 3 million documents that the DOJ released. It was locked in a federal courthouse vault for nearly seven years, sitting in the case file of an unrelated quadruple murder trial, while the rest of the world argued about whether Epstein killed himself or was killed. It became public on May 6, 2026, because a judge ordered it to be unsealed after the New York Times requested it. And today we're going through what it really says, what it really means, where it's been, who may or may not have written it, and why it is surfacing right now. Sit back, relax, and welcome to camp. What's up, dude? Welcome back to camp. My name is Mark Gagnon, and thank you for joining me in my tent where every single week we explore the most interesting, fascinating, controversial stories from around the world. From all time, forever. Yes, that is what I do here in this tent as I go on crazy rabbit holes trying to figure out what everything really means. And. And, boy, do we have a great episode today. Before we jump in, I want to say thank you to you. Yeah, dude. For clicking on this video. Every time you click or comment on one of these videos, you help keep my dreams alive. You help keep the lights on in the tent, and you help keep the fire burning. Now, before we go any further, I also want to tell you about a secret society, One of the most secretive and exclusive secret societies in the entire world. And it's found@patreon.com Camp Gagnon. Yes, it is the inner sanctum where me and the fellow campers all gather in the late dark cover of the forest. A night on patreon.com and we go through, you know, bonus episodes that don't go out to the public. You may or may not get every single episode of this show. Plus Religion Camp, plus History Camp, all ad free and also allegedly monthly zooms where we tune in and tap in with all the good people here at the campsite, and all of that will be yours for just the price of a cup of coffee. Now, I also want to give a big shout out to My pal Christos. How are you, my friend? What's up? No time, Christos, because today we're talking about this, this letter, this note that was found allegedly and Jeffrey Epstein's fault, written by him himself. I mean, you've probably seen headlines of this. You've probably seen this popping up on x.com, probably seen it on YouTube maybe a little bit. And the New York Times just did a big story on it where they're looking at this alleged end of life note. I don't even know if I can say the s word on YouTube without getting completely blasted off the Internet. So I'll be unfortunately forced to use algorithmically safe words, even though it's very dumb. Now, you would think today of all days, we'd probably be jumping into the recent release of all the UFO files that Trump just put out. We're going to be talking about that in the next episode. Don't, don't worry about that. But it's probably going to be nothing, to be honest between us. But we'll see. We're going to dig in, okay? There's some stuff coming up. We're going to look at it. All right? We're going to get to the bottom of what's going on there. But that'll be the next episode, so make sure you subscribe to check that one out. But today we're talking about this mysterious note. And in order to understand where this note came from or what it is or who wrote it, we need to go all the way to the man who allegedly found it. His name is Nicholas Tartaglioni, and he spent most of his career as a police officer in Briarcliff Manor. This is a small vil village in Westchester County, New York, not far from where we are right now. And in 2016, he left the police force. And according to federal prosecutors, he had gotten deeply involved in drug trafficking. Now, in April of that year, he was involved, allegedly in the killing of four men, one of whom was allegedly tortured and strangled over stolen money. Now, Tartaglioni was arrested, charged with four counts of murder, and sent to the Metropolitan Correctional center in Lower Manhattan to await trial and was placed in the Special Housing Unit, AKA the shu. This is a section of the facility reserved for inmates who need to be separated from the general population, either for their own safety or for the safety of others. Now, when the disgraced financier and notorious trafficker Jeffrey Epstein arrived at the very same MCC on July 6, 2019, the day after his arrest on federal sex trafficking charges, he was Also assigned to the special housing unit. Epstein case was obviously very high profile, and so much so that putting him anywhere near the general population would have been a massive security risk. So to the SHU it was. And in that same special housing unit, he was put in a cell with Tartaglioni. So the man facing federal sex trafficking charges and arguably the most famous inmate in the federal system at that moment, was placed in a cell with someone awaiting trial for a quadruple murder that included torture. Prison officials later said that this was because Tartaglioni had a relatively stable behavioral record inside the facility. I mean, he was a former cop. He generally kind of knew what the deal was. And by accounts from the prison staff, he was playing by the rules. Now, according to an internal prison investigative report, Tartaglioni himself told staff at the time that he didn't have any issues being housed with Epstein, but that he didn't want to be involved in any plans or anything related to Epstein that he might be doing to try to get himself released. He also noted that Epstein spent a lot of time pacing back and forth in the cell, complaining about his lawyers and complaining about prison conditions. And that detail, the pacing, the complaints about the attorneys not doing their job, is a small detail, but it does give us a look into Epstein's state of mind in those early weeks. He had been denied bail. He can't go to his, you know, mansion in Manhattan. He's in a cell roughly the size of, like, a parking space, and he's stuck with a man convicted of strangling someone over a drug dispute. And he's also convinced that his legal team isn't fighting hard for him at all. Now, Epstein and Tartaglione end up sharing a cell for about two weeks until everything gets crazy. So at 1:27 in the morning on July 23, 2019, guards find Epstein on the floor of his cell. He's semi conscious. There is an orange cloth ligature around his neck, and he has a circular line of redness and friction marks roughly about on two thirds of his neck. And he also has an abrasion on left knee, but he's breathing. He's then placed in restraints, but he won't stand on his own and won't comply with any directives. So they put him on a gurney and take him to medical. The official incident report codes this as a code 228, which is coded as a self mutilation. Now, here's where the story splits into a bunch of different directions. Tartaglioni, his cellmate in later accounts says he woke up and thought Epstein was having a heart attack. His eyes were open, he was appearing to be snoring in some way, and that he actually performed CPR on him. Keep him alive. One unnamed source told media at the time that Epstein told his lawyers that Tartaglioni had inflicted the injuries onto him. However, prison investigators later concluded that there was insufficient evidence that Tartaglioni assaulted Epstein in any way. Another unnamed source claims that Epstein staged the incident and hurt himself deliberately, hoping that it would get him transferred to a better facility or even put on some type of parole or even released or some type of attempt to just get out of that situation. Now, neither of those sources were identified and neither account has been officially verified. But what is documented is that on July 23, the same day that Epstein was found on the floor, Epstein told prison staff that Tartaglioni did assault him and tried to kill him. And then the very next day, on July 24, he walked the entire story back. He told prison psychologists that Tartaglioni had actually never threatened him and that he had no memory at all of the incident. It is said that he reported to them explicitly, I have no interest in killing myself. I'm too vested in my case to fight it. I have a life and I want to go back to living my life. That's what Epstein allegedly said. Now, despite this, he's placed on a watch for people that are trying to harm themselves. And he's moved out of Tartaglioni's cell. And Tartaglioni goes back to that same cell alone. At some point in the days that follow, Tartaglioni opens a graphic novel and finds a note folded inside that he claims was in Epstein's handwri. He gave it to his lawyers, and the note is pretty short. It's only six sentences. There's no date, no signature. And it simply says this. They investigated me for months, found nothing. So 15 year old charges resulted. It is a treat to be able to choose one's time to say goodbye. What you want me to do? Burst out crying? No fun, not worth it. What's up, guys? We're gonna take a break, cuz. I want to talk to you about something that happens in your late 20s, early 30s, that no one tells you that basically your ability to handle a night out drinking with the boys completely changes, bro. When I was 22, I could go out on like a Thursday, sleep three hours, wake up, go to work, then go to the gym, feel completely normal, and then do it again the same day. Like, I felt un invincible. And now I have like two glasses of wine and the next morning I wake up and I'm like, what did I do? And the craziest part is I can actually, like, see it now. Like, I literally will wear like a whoop. And I can see my sleep score that night and be like, oh, I had two beers. So now I have like a 5% recovery. Recovery. My body's trying to recover from alcohol in a bunch of different ways. Not just dehydration. I mean, it affects, you know, brain chemistry and your liver has to process everything you drink. 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Thank you guys so much. Cheers has been amazing. I can't handle the uneasiness of the next day. And Cheers makes it all possible. Now let's get back to the show. Now, the letter starts with allegedly Epstein referencing his past charges. They investigated me for months and found nothing. So 15 year old charges resulted in. That's how Epstein framed his arrest. That is allegedly what he was thinking when he was brought into federal custody. He originally went to a federal court in Florida in 2007 and 2008, but walked away with a state level guilty plea in 13 months in a county jail under a work release. This is like the most lenient deal in history if you haven't been following the case. It's crazy that he got the sweetheart deal and it was so lenient that it eventually cost the prosecutor, this guy named Alexander Acosta, who basically, you know, negotiated it, his cabinet position later with the president. So when the Southern District of New York came back with federal sex trafficking charges in 2018, Epstein's legal team argued that it was a constitutional overreach, basically saying that the system is doing a witch hunt against him and that it has gone too far. But thankfully, the courts disagreed. And those two sentences tell you exactly how Epstein felt about what was happening to him. He took no accountability. It was just persecution. It was a witch hunt. And then he goes on to say, it's a treat to be able to choose one's time, time to say goodbye. Now, on its face, this is clearly someone, you know, based off of how most people read it. This is someone that is, you know, talking about, you know, deciding to die. Someone that has accepted death, but he was found alive that night. And the tone of the note overall is anger and combative and not despair, which makes this line harder to read as a, you know, pure goodbye to the world. And, you know, maybe it could be interpreted as someone like, showing defiance or, you know, talking about the unfair imprisonment that he believes he's undergoing. And then this last line, what you want me to do? Burst out crying? No fun, not worth it. Now, this is where the wording gets really interesting. Those words, no fun appear underlined in this note. And the same phrase, underlined the same way shows up in a separate note found in Epstein's cell after his August 10th death. Now, could you pull up that one? It's at the very bottom. And I referenced it in a, in a different article. And basically it's thought that, you know, this note was found after his death, and it uses no fun in referen jail conditions. And people are suggesting this is. Yeah, this is the note here. And it basically says, kept me locked in a shower stall for an hour. Has. They basically haven't sent me food. Giant bugs crawl over my hands. No fun. Underlined. And so people are looking at this note as well as the note that was just released by the New York Times, and they're saying that these notes have similar, you know, language with that no fun line, and that they're both, you know, underlined. And people are suggesting that this indicator indicates that they both come from the same person, allegedly Jeffrey Epstein. Now, in a completely different document, this is an email sent from Epstein to his brother, Mark Epstein. He uses the phrase, what you want me to do? Burst out crying nearly verbatim back in 2016. And this line, this catchphrase actually comes from the show Little Rascals, which allegedly Epstein was a. A fan of that show, which, I mean, come on. Writes itself. I mean, right? Like, Epstein's watching Little Rascals. Of course, you creep. Like, really? This is crazy, but can you pull up that. That line from. From that episode, this is the last breakfast. I am gonna fix me. You st. What do you want me to do? Bust out crime? So that's the line from the show. It's in reference to this character basically having, like, one final party before getting sent to adoption. And that's kind of like what the. This is like, the last time they're gonna see him. Which seems like it's kind of, you know, vaguely interpreted in this sense with Epstein, you know, basically being like, hey, this is the last time you're gonna see me. What am I gonna do? Burst out crying? And that's how a lot of people, especially online, are interpreting it. Now, it's interesting because that exact same line, verbatim, comes from or is found in an email in 2016 from Epstein to his brother. Now, that email is the closest thing confirming that this was written by Epstein that we have, because the DOJ just confirmed that they have actually never seen the note before. So the DOJ statement was very direct. They said this is the first time the Department of Justice is seeing it as well. So no forensic examiner has actually ever analyzed it in an official capacity. And the note supposedly reached a courthouse vault without ever passing through a single government hand. So the question is, why? Now, the Note dropped on May 6, 2026, and the date is maybe not perfectly random, despite it being coincidental, on the exact same day that the note was released, a commerce secretary named Howard Lutnick was behind closed doors on Capitol Hill being questioned by the House Oversight Committee for four hours about his relationship with Epstein. Now, Lutnick, who was Epstein's neighbor in Manhattan, appears approximately 250 records in the DOJ's Epstein file releases. And had previously claimed that he cut ties with Epstein completely in 2005, but then was forced to acknowledge during testimony that the two had some relationship after that, including a 2012 lunch on Epstein's private island. Now, Democrats on the committee came out of the session calling his testimony evasive and saying that he was, you know, dodging questions and he was deflecting, and they called for his resignation, while Republicans said that he was forthcoming and upfront and committed no wrongdoing at all in his relationship with Epstein. And Lutnick is significant because he's the highest ranking Trump administrative official prominently named in the Epstein files, of course, outside of Trump himself. But to understand why that matters for this note, you have to understand the broader Epstein document situation in 2026, because it's a lot. Trump campaigned in 2024, obviously, on releasing these files, and it was core to the MAGA message, right, that the government is run by powerful people that are hiding the truth, and I'm going to be the one to come out and expose everything. Congress passed the Epstein File Transparency act and mandated the DOJ to release everything by mid December 2025. But as we know now, the DOJ completely missed that deadline. And then when the files did start coming out, they were heavily redacted. And Trump, who has been mentioned, I mean, well over a thousand times across, all these documents reversed course entirely and then called this ongoing Epstein focus just a witch hunt and a hoax. And then that takes us to September of 2025, when a birthday note purportedly signed by Trump to Epstein in 2003 was released showing Trump's signature. And the line, may every day be another wonderful secret. In that same note, he talks about how enigmas never age. And it's a very strange note that Trump has denied writing, and he called it fake. And he actually filed a $10 billion lawsuit against the Wall Street Journal for even reporting on it. Then In January of 2026, the DOJ releases 3 million more documents. He, you know, they get buried in them, all these different, I guess, notes. One of them is a forged letter claiming to be from Epstein to convicted sex offender Larry Nassar. And in this forged note, Epstein falsely claims, let me say falsely in the sense that the note has not been proven to be true. Maybe not that the claim is false, but that the note isn't true. But Epstein allegedly says that Trump loved young, nubile girls, and this caused the DOJ to explicitly post on social media and confirm that this letter was fake. Was it actually fake? We don't know. And then you have Attorney General Pam Bondi, who was removed in April of 2026 in part over her handling of the Epstein file releases, and she's actually set to have a hearing very soon, which we will also cover. So the environment in which this note drops is, you know, there's a ton of things happening, all simultaneous. You have active congressional investigation, a sitting cabinet secretary testifying about his relationship with Epstein on the same day that the note drops, documents full of forgeries, and a political moment in which Epstein is, you know, being used as a weapon, as well as, you know, rightfully being connected with all these people that, you know, had done business with him and perhaps even corroborated his crimes. Now, the New York Times request to unseal the note was filed on April 30, before the Lutnick testimony date was set. So the overlap appears to be coincidental. But coincidence when it comes to Epstein is, you know, it's a little bit different than, you know, just regular coincidences. The DOJ's official position as of May 7 is that the note has not been authenticated. No federal forensic examiner ever analyzed it so far, and no government investigator has actually ever seen the original note. Now, Tartaglioni's lawyers said that they had the note examined by private handwriting experts, and they authenticated it as Epstein's writing. But those expert reports have not been made public so far. Even the court's order to unseal the note doesn't establish the authenticity outright. So Judge Kara simply ruled it as judicial documents subject to public access. The note being public is not the same as the note being officially verified. So the question is, who wrote it if not for Epstein himself? Well, there are a couple theories. Hey, guys, we're gonna take a break real quick, because I gotta tell you something that I'm actually stoked about now, if you know me, you know, I love coffee. I love caffeine. I was also ripping nicotine pouches all the time. Like, sometimes going through, like, a pack a day. And honestly, I started to notice. I was, like, a little wound up. Like, my heart was racing. I was, like, kind of on edge, not sleeping great. I was, like, kind of anxious. And if you're into. Into, like, you know, wellness and biohacking, like I am, that's your body trying to tell you something. And that is why I love Ultra pouches. I reached out to them because I love the product. And before you ask, no, these are not a nicotine product. There's zero nicotine, technically, no caffeine. What they are is a pouch loaded with nootropics and adaptogen stuff like Alpha UPC for mental sharpness, L Theanine for this calm focus, and Infinity px, which gives you this clean, smooth energy that doesn't make you feel like you're gonna explode. I still get like the ritual that I love. Like, I just love taking a pouch out and trying it. Watermelon is actually my favorite flavor. But you don't get the anxiety spike or the withdrawal like you do with nicotine. And my sleep was actually, it's gotten a lot better. Which, if you know anything about recovery is the most important thing. I mean, these are legit. I keep them on the desk. I actually have one in right now. And if you've been thinking about, you know, maybe using a little bit less nicotine or you just want like a cleaner energy source than nicotine, you gotta check out Ultra and you're gonna do it@takeultra.com and you're gonna use the code Camp C A M P for 15% off. That's takeultra.com camp. And when they ask you about how you heard about us, tell them the good people at Camp Gagnon sent you. It really helps out the show. Now let's get back to it. The first theory is that Tartaglioni wrote it himself. Again, this is Epstein's cellmate and this is perhaps the most simple alternative. He is a convicted serving four consecutive life sentences and has every incentive to position himself as the man who, you know, who was there, what with Epstein that, you know, didn't attack him, that perhaps even tried to save Epstein's life so that he could be brought to justice. He's the sole source of the claim that Epstein wrote it, but critics point out that the note conveniently supports his version of events at every point. It confirms the July incident was a genuine, you know, self mutilation attempt. And it validates his CPR story in a way and it gives him a heroic role in a story where he otherwise would have been kind of more of a villain. But the issue with this is that Tartaglioni had no idea of the specific phrasing that Epstein used in emails years earlier. Phrases that appear nearly verbatim in the note. What you want me to do? You know, burst out crying. So this consistency makes it a little bit difficult to say clearly that Tartaglione wrote it himself. Now, one theory is that, you know, it's possible that Tartaglioni was given this to write and that perhaps he was given a transcript of what to write on a piece of paper, or that perhaps the note was given to him for him to find. You know, Tartaglioni has his own criminal record and has, you know, a desire to, you know, vindicate himself or perhaps be useful to some type of, you know, federal investigation in trade for some type of reduced sentence or some way that he could work around his own case. Now, the theory, too, is similar to this, that it's genuine, but from someone other than Tartaglioni. So the note could have been written by Epstein and found by someone other than, you know, Tartaglioni, or it was given to Tartaglione rather than him discovering it on his own. So Epstein, of course, had attorney visits nearly every single day. He had contact with various prison staff, and the graphic novel story is his, you know, Tartaglioni's account and only his. So it's possible that the note could. Could still be written by Epstein, but the details about how he obtained it might be inaccurate or incomplete. And this, again, leaves room for people to speculate about who actually wrote it. And then, of course, you have the third theory, and there might be even more theories that we can speculate on, but this is the third one that I've seen circulating is that it was written either by. And this one's crazy. It was either written by or written at the behest of Trump. And so this is the one that everyone's talking about on social media, and they're all looking at this, and the evidence behind it is interesting, but. But a bit tacit. So let's go through it. A lot of people reading the note for the first time will say that it sounds like Trump. It's got all cap words, there's exclamation points everywhere. It's very combative. They investigated me and found nothing. Like, it's very, you know, effusive. And, you know, the note has no indication that there's any guilt or remorse. Now, this theory is obviously difficult to connect, but the Epstein document world already has a confirmed for forgery in that, you know, that basically made its way all the way into the official DOJ release. This is that letter that Epstein allegedly had wrote, written to Larry Nassar, and, you know, a fake letter claiming to be from Epstein attacking Trump was distributed by the government and had to be publicly walked back. So asking whether this note might also be fabricated in some way isn't that crazy? And it's kind of what the track record of this whole case shows, right? If someone was able to write a letter to Larry Nassar and claim that it was from Epstein and it goes all the way to the top, and then Trump had to be like, oh, that's fake. Why are we supposed to look at this letter and assume that this is also not fake? Right? Like, it's possible that this was a fabricated note that somehow made its way into the cell, either through a handler, maybe through a lawyer, maybe through prison staff, maybe through Tartaglioni himself. And if someone wanted to fabricate a document that helped close the question of whether Epstein actually took his own life or not, this type of note from before his death would be exactly what you would want. You would want some type of confirmation from Epstein himself to say, hey, I'm actually gone. I've actually ended my life. And, you know, that's. That's what it is. Now, politically, the note is useful for, you know, the Epstein killed himself narrative. This is a world where, you know, Trump is under a ton of pressure from the files, from congressional investigators, from a general public that suspects that there's a massive cover up happening, plus his other, you know, political issues with, you know, foreign wars and things like that. Having a piece of writing that looks like Epstein willingly just took his own life is a very useful thing to have. And to be honest, there's not a ton of evidence other than that, there's no handwriting comparison to Trump that's been done that's significant. Nothing point towards Trump like literally writing it himself, of course, and it's difficult to connect that to anyone else in Trump's circle. Now, the note was sitting in Tartaglioni's lawyer's case file for years before Trump actually came back into office. Remember, this happened allegedly in 2019, and it has basically just been sitting in a vault until now. And the phrase in that note suggests that, you know, there's. There's some correlation that no fun line that was found on two different alleged Epstein notes. And the burst out crying phrasing just kind of matches other Epstein emails and things that Epstein has said in the past. But also Epstein has said a lot of stuff, so who knows if there's other phrasing that could have also been connected. Connected. Now, despite this theory not being backed up by anything concrete, the case already has so many layers and so many looming questions and so many unanswered points that asking this question or being skeptical of this document isn't that unreasonable? I don't think so. How do we actually verify this type of note? Someone would need to compare the handwriting against confirmed Epstein writing samples. And I actually. Someone on X actually did that. If you could pull that up, you could actually test the ink and the paper to see how old, you know, the, the actual like material is. Could get Tartaglioni's lawyers to release the handwriting expert report that they said that they did and that they claim exists. And you, of course, could have the DOJ do its own analysis. Now, this is a handwriting analysis from a known Epstein document that is verified from the files that he actually wrote. And it is comparing the T's. So you have the lowercase T's from the note that was found in the cell. And all those teas seem to like, kind of slope downwards. They're at the very least cross and they're, you know, sometimes sloping downwards. If you're not looking at the video, obviously, I can explain. You can imagine like the cross T, where, you know, the part that's going horizontally is kind of curved down. Now, in the confirmed Jeffrey Epstein documents that come from his files where he wrote letters to people, the T's curve up almost in every case. So this indicates that perhaps this note wasn't written by Epstein. It also doesn't really carry the same kind of tonality or candor that Epstein typically wrote with. So a lot of people are calling this into question just through this sort of, you know, casual layperson analysis to suggest that these documents were not actually written by Epstein at all and that perhaps even the other document that was found in his cell, talking about being in solitary or being in a shower for an hour and bugs crawling on his hands. No fun. That that one might also be some type of fabrication. What if he was writing upside down? It is possible. It is possible. So I don't know. Yeah, things get a little crazy in there. But it seems to me based off of just even eyeballing. Again, I'm not a handwriting expert, I'm not a forensic, you know, an analyst. But looking at the writing myself, it just doesn't look like it was written by him. Now, maybe he's in a place of extreme duress. Maybe he's undergoing some type of psychosis from being in prison as opposed to his, you know, multi, multi million dollar homes around the world. But I don't know if that's enough to make you Forget how to write. You know, seems a little strange to me that all of a sudden his handwriting looks so vastly different now. There has been no official analysis so far. There has been no, you know, the DOJ hasn't done their own analysis. So technically, the only thing we know for certain is that the note is public, and the author of this note is still up for question. So what do we do with this? Right? How do we, you know, where does this put us? The note isn't really a confession. It's not really a smoking gun in either direction to me. And it was written allegedly during the July 23 incident, moments before Epstein was found alive in his cell, and then, you know, before his second attempt. If you go by the official narrative, and whatever he may have felt when he wrote those words, he didn't complete the act. Now, what it does provide, if it is genuine, is it's the only document describing Epstein's psychological state from his own words in the weeks before he either died or disappeared. There's, you know, no psychologist summary that's been released. There's not a statement, really, from anyone that he knew. This is something that he actually wrote and. Or allegedly wrote. And what it shows is that, you know, he's furious, and he frames the situation being, you know, as being bullied and, you know, a witch hunt. And that this is something that's completely unfair. And he never sees this as any type of, you know, he doesn't use it as a moment of guilt or regret or taking any accountability for his crimes. And then, shortly after, according to the official story, he tries to take his own life, which is the complete opposite of what he told the prison psychologist that very next morning on July 20 forth, he said explicitly to that psychologist he had no interest in taking his own life and wanted to get back to that life that was taken away from him. And both of those statements came from the Same person within 24 hours of each other, allegedly. One in a handwritten note, one in a documented interview with a mental health professional. And it seems like there's. They're not really lining up. Now, the note doesn't really tell us what happened in the cell, but, you know, neither does anything else in the public record, and, you know, at least not with enough certainty to actually make people accept the official story. And that is everything that has gone on so far in just, you know, the past day regarding this Epstein note. So we can go through a couple theories here, right? One theory is Epstein is in a cell, and he's pissed, and he's terrified, and he's angry, and he just wants to end it all. And he writes this note, tries to take his own life, and then fails at doing that. And he's revived by his, you know, cellmate, and then tells the psychologist, like, oh, he attacked me, because he's so embarrassed and so ashamed of trying to take his own life. And it's such a horrendous thing to do. And he's, you know, deeply humiliated that it wasn't successful and that he's still there and now has to face the consequences of this behavior. And then he says, actually, this guy attacked me. And so he now puts the blame on him. Him. But now he's in a situation where, like, he's bringing charges up against this guy. They're going to look into what actually happened. So then he says, actually, I don't know what happened. I have no memory of the event. And then, you know, a few. I guess, yeah, a few weeks later, he takes his own life for real. That would be, like, the official narrative that I think most people. Maybe the mainstream narrative that a lot of people would be like, okay, that. That makes sense. You know, there's a. A line in there that connects with an email that he used 10 years, or I guess at this point, three years before. And there's, you know, other notes that were found, allegedly attributed to him that also have similar handwriting with the same no fun underlined. So that's one theory. The other theory here is that Tartaglioni, you know, himself was one that either was given the note, was told to find the note, was told to write the note, or wrote the note himself, and that he some way was involved in the fabrication of this note in order to serve his own means. So maybe he was told, like, hey, you should take out Epstein, you know, and Tartaglioni is currently, you know, in prison, allegedly for these crimes where a person was killed through strangulation. So is it possible that they said, like, hey, is there someone that could handle this guy? Take him out so that he can't talk and we can get this thing settled. And so they put Tartaglione and Epstein in the same cell, and they basically have people going to Tartaglioni, like, hey, you know what you have to do? Now, maybe he takes this deal because he wants to get less prison time, or maybe they offer him some type of thing where they're like, hey, we'll give you a lenient sentence. You're going to jail for life. Or you can go to jail for 20 years. If you handle our little business here. But it seems a little bit shaky to try to put that in the hands of this guy. Like, hey, these people in black suits came up to me in the middle of the night and told me to take out Epstein. So not super strong in that regard. But is it possible that he found the note or was given the note in such a way to make it advantageous for him in his trial? You know, apparently he gave the note to his lawyers to prove that he had nothing to do with, you know, Epstein's injuries and that he's, you know, being framed for this. And that this note confirms that Epstein was contemplating ending his own life in order to vindicate Tartaglioni. That's possible. You know, it's possible that he's the one that fabricated. Again, he's a guy that's, you know, killed four people, allegedly. So I don't know if he's in the most sound mind and is willing to do something to, you know, help his own sentence out. And he's also a guy that worked as a cop for many years. Like, he understands more or less how the legal system works better than the average person. And then this other theory of, you know, was it written by someone associated with Trump in some way? People have pointed out that the writing has all these, like, dashes in it, which they say are clearly indicative of, you know, chatgpt writing. So is it possible that, you know, they were using some type of language model back in 2019 to basically draft up a thing and gave him a direct copy or copied it directly, including. Including all the dashes? That's possible. I haven't seen enough of Epstein's writing to know if he uses M dashes that often, but it's another theory that I think is entertaining. I don't know if it's really. I don't know if it's even really possible to pin it on. On. On Trump or his circle in that way, but who knows? I mean, I'm not fully convinced that. I would say. I'm like, is Epstein. Is Epstein dead? I think he probably is dead. Dead. Is there's a chance he's not? Let me be clear. I think it's very possible he's not dead, but I think he probably is. Did he take his own life? I. I don't. I'm like, I don't think he willingly took his own life. I think it's very possible. I think it's very possible, very, very possible that someone took him out, of course. And I also Think it's possible that he was given the means to take himself out, that basically they came to him, they said, hey, we're going to take you out on this day day, and you can end it before we're going to have all the guards step away, no one's going to check the cells, we're going to turn the cameras off and you can just take, you can go out the easy way, not face any of this, or we're going to take you out. And I think it's possible that he's given an option and then he had to choose, and this is the one that he chose. So is it possible that he took his own life under some type of direct intimidation and given the means to do it? I do think that that's possible. Now, the note is strange because it doesn't, it doesn't read like a typical end of life note. You know, typically these notes would have like a thank you to people or, you know, talking to people that he truly loves. And typically that's something you see more often like, you know, to my family or to my friends or to my whatever. Like this just seems, if it is written by Epstein, just a, a note of him describing his frustrations. It doesn't read to me. If it is from him as an end of life note, perhaps personally, it's almost a little self congratulatory, like they couldn't get me, they couldn't catch me riding dirty, right. That I did nothing wrong. They had to bring up these old charges that are all bs. I'm completely innocent. Da, da, da, da. It doesn't read to me like a traditional note. So maybe it is written by Epstein, like perhaps again, I'm averse to certainty and anyone that tells you that they know the truth is probably lying. But I think it's, at the very least it doesn't read to me as an end of life note. And it also definitely doesn't look like his handwriting handwriting. So to me I'm like, is it his handwriting? 5%, 10%? Is it look like the face of a liar mark? Kind of looks like you. So yes, but I don't know. That's just my, that's my take. That's my analysis. I think that, yeah, it's just the whole thing is just so weird. And if people are questioning this, I think they're completely right to question it. I mean, it comes from a convicted murderer. It comes from, you know, a case that's been so severely mishandled and absolutely, you know, been an absolute miscarriage of justice, like, so many ways over that. For anyone to look at this and be like, yep, there you have it. The smoking gun. He definitely took his own life. This is the. The note. I think that they're just being completely disingenuous to, you know, all the other evidence that surrounds this case case, as well as the other cases that are involved with his cellmate. So that's my take. I don't know. Crisos, you got anything? No, I just think it's extremely timely how it came out. You know, we're in the middle of UAP disclosure, a whole bunch of other stuff, and it's like more Epstein. Yeah. Once again, antivirus. Once again. Just flooding the plane with all this stuff. Just, hey, get this stuff out there. Get the stuff out there. So. So I don't know. To me. Did Epstein write this as an end of life note? No. Did Epstein write it? Maybe. Was it discovered in the way that the official story is saying? Probably not, but I don't know. What do you guys think? I'm so curious. Is this. Is this his handwriting? Do you think this was written by him? Is it an end of life note? I would love to know your thoughts. Please drop them in the comments. I read all of the comments, so I'd love to know what you think. And yeah, I would love. If there's anything I missed on this case, by all means, please let me know. I can do another video where we update. Where we update. You know, we can update you on what we find, but please drop a comment. I would love to read them. And I also have some good news if you are interested in historical content. Well, we have History Camp. That's where I deep dive on everything that's ever happened. And if you're curious what everyone believes and where we go after we all die, well, great news. We have religion camp, and that's where I go through every religion in the world. And if you just like to rock with deep dives, you know, the mysteries of the world, the occult world, world, and all that stuff. Well, great news. We do that right here at Camp Gagnon, and we have many guests that deep dive on, you know, all that stuff. Way more intelligent and, you know, interesting than me that actually know what they're talking about. So we're definitely going to be doing an episode on Trump's UAP disclosure stuff that came out on Friday, May 8th. We're also gonna be doing an episode on all the evidence that Jeffrey Epstein may still be alive, because there's a lot of weird things about this case that indicate to some people that he may actually not be gone at all and perhaps where he is and how he got out. But all that to say I appreciate you all dearly. Thank you so much for tuning to another another episode of Camp. Please subscribe. Check us out on patreon.com camp Gagnon and I will see you all next time. God bless. Peace.
