Jeffrey Epstein, video editing and Bureau of Prisons
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The release of surveillance footage from outside Jeffrey Epstein's prison cell has raised new questions of veracity. Despite the DOJ's claims of 'raw' footage, technical analysis reveals potential edits and inconsistencies.
Federal officials are facing renewed scrutiny after the Department of Justice (DOJ) released surveillance footage labeled "raw" from the night Jeffrey Epstein died in a Manhattan jail cell-footage that video forensics experts say was likely modified before publication.
An analysis by Wired determined that the hours-long footage, released by the DOJ to quell conspiracies involving Epstein’s 2019 in-custody suicide, was “likely modified” using the professional video editing software Adobe Premiere Pro.
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Boing Boing on MSNMetadata implies FBI's "raw" Epstein jail footage was splicedBefore they were put in charge of the FBI, MAGA influencers like Kash "K$H" Patel and Dan Bongino often claimed that billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein's death was suspicious and that his "client list" featured a lengthy roster of elite figures.
The US Department of Justice this week released nearly 11 hours of surveillance video it claimed was “full raw” footage from a camera near Jeffrey Epstein’s prison cell, recorded the night before his 2019 death. But rather than putting to rest years of conspiracy theories, the video has only deepened public suspicion.
The Justice Department and FBI have officially stated that no “client list” of powerful men connected to Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking exists, publicly contradicting earlier claims by Attorney General Pam Bondi and walking back election campaign promises made by Donald Trump that he would release such information.