Jeffrey Epstein Autopsy Report

Jeffrey Epstein

Jeffrey Epstein was a sex offender who would commit suicide at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York suicide while he awaited trial for an assortment of sexual crimes. According to police reports Jeffrey Epstein would use his significant wealth to stay in front of authorities for years as he committed an array of sexual offences. When he was finally arrested many fingers started to point at those who have been seen with Jeffrey Epstein in the past. However before his trial could begin a series of events took place

The first being Jeffrey Epstein was found unconscious with marks around his neck. His cellmate at the Metropolitan Correction Center at the time was former New York Police Officer Nicholas Tartaglione who was awaiting trial for four murders. Nicholas Tartaglione denied having any involvement in what happened to Epstein. Jeffrey Epstein would be moved to a special handling unit as a result of the incident

At the new location within the Metropolitan Correctional Center Jeffrey Epstein had a different cellmate and guards were suppose to check on him every twenty minutes. However the night Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide that did not happen. Jeffrey Epstein would be found hanging at 6:30am on August 10 2019.

Needless to say there have been a lot of theories surrounding his death ranging from that he committed suicide to his suicide was staged and it was actually a murder to a long list of other theories. Below is the actual autopsy report:

jeffrey epstein autopsy report

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Almost five months after convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in his jail cell, 60 Minutes has obtained the photographs the New York City medical examiner’s office took, including inside his cell and during his autopsy. 

The photographs shed new light on the circumstances of the disgraced financier’s apparent suicide, which has fueled online conspiracy theories. But multiple forensic pathologists 60 Minutes spoke to came to a consensus that without one image—the position of how Epstein’s body was found in his cell—it is difficult to determine the cause of death with certainty. 

“Even after reviewing all the autopsy photos, reading the autopsy, and looking at the photos from inside the cell, we still have questions,” said 60 Minutes correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi, who reports on a months-long investigation into the circumstances of Epstein’s death on the broadcast Sunday.

What is not in question is that Epstein is dead. According to forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden, who was hired by Jeffrey Epstein’s brother to look into the death and was present during the autopsy, the fingerprints on the body found in Epstein’s cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in the early morning of August 10, 2019 match the fingerprints taken of Epstein when he was booked during a 2006 arrest in Florida. 

No photo exists of Epstein’s body as it was found in his cell, Dr. Baden said. Additional forensic pathologists 60 Minutes consulted say that knowing the position in which Jeffrey Epstein was found would clarify certain aspects of the autopsy, including the location of the ligature around his neck, injuries found on his body postmortem, and the way lividity settled, which is the way the blood pools after death. 

“At this length of time, [we] still don’t have that information,” Dr. Baden said. “So if this was called a suicide without all that information, it was a premature judgment.”

New York City Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Barbara Sampson ruled in August that Epstein’s cause of death was a suicide by hanging.

Among the injuries found on Jeffrey Epstein during the autopsy are contusions on both wrists, an abrasion on his left forearm, and deep muscle hemorrhaging in his left shoulder muscle. Photos 60 Minutes reviewed also show an injury to the back of his neck, a cut on his lip, and an injection mark in his arm, though it is unknown whether the latter injuries happened during an attempt to resuscitate Epstein at the hospital.

Dr. Baden said small burst capillaries, known as petechiae, found on Epstein’s face, mouth, and eyes are often an indication of strangulation. But it was injuries to Epstein’s neck that make Dr. Baden call into question the official ruling of suicide. 

Autopsy photos show fractures of the left and right thyroid cartilage, which sits at the front of the neck, and the left hyoid bone, a u-shaped bone that sits under the jaw and acts as an anchor for the tongue.

“I have never seen three fractures like this in a suicidal hanging,” Dr. Baden tells Alfonsi on the broadcast. He added: “Going over a thousand jail hangings, suicides in the New York City state prisons over the past 40–50 years, no one had three fractures.” 

The pathologists 60 Minutes spoke with agreed that eye hemorrhaging is common in homicidal strangulation and less common, though not impossible, in suicidal hangings. But they disagreed on the significance of the three breaks in Epstein’s neck. One concurred with Dr. Baden that the three neck fractures were very uncommon and raise additional questions. Another pathologist said the neck trauma has been associated with both strangulation and hanging, especially in older men. Epstein was 66. 
  
Dr. Kristin Roman, a medical examiner for New York City who conducted the autopsy that Dr. Baden observed, at first did not classify the death as a suicide and listed the manner of death as “pending.” A few days later, Dr. Sampson said she had reviewed additional evidence and changed the ruling to suicide. She has not revealed what the additional evidence was, but sources tell 60 Minutes that one element was his alleged prior suicide attempt.

60 Minutes reached out to the office of the New York City medical examiner but did not hear back. In response to a media appearance Dr. Baden made on Fox News in October, Dr. Sampson told the New York Times she stands “firmly” behind her findings in the August autopsy report. 
 
“In general, fractures of the hyoid bone and the cartilage can be seen in suicides and homicides,” she said at the time.

In an October interview with the Associated Press, Dr. Sampson added: “You can’t draw a conclusion from one finding. Everything about the case has to be considered.” 

Dr. Baden himself is not without controversy. He briefly served as New York City’s medical examiner, but Mayor Edward Koch dismissed him a year later. He has also taken provocative stances in high-profile cases, including in the 1995 trial for O.J. Simpson. An HBO documentary series has featured Baden, who estimates he has performed more than 20,000 autopsies in his 45-year career.

In addition to the photos 60 Minutes obtained of Epstein’s autopsy, photos from his jail cell also appear to show inconsistencies, including questions about whether investigators examined the correct ligature used in Epstein’s death. At least two nooses were photographed lying on the floor of the cell, both appearing to be made from strips of orange bedsheets. 

But photos of the noose taken in as evidence and presumably thought to be responsible for killing Epstein show both ends of the noose folded and hemmed, not cut. Sources have told 60 Minutes that the guard who found Epstein cut him down before trying to revive him. 

“It doesn’t look like anybody ever took scissors to it,” Alfonsi said. “So there is some question—is that the right noose?’  

Federal prosecutors have charged the two guards who were on duty on the overnight shift the morning Jeffrey Epstein was found. Michael Thomas, who alone found Epstein’s body, and Tova Noel face charges of making false records, conspiring to make false records, and conspiring to defraud the United States. Both have pleaded not guilty. 
 
Because of the ongoing criminal investigation into the guards and other open investigations into Epstein’s death, neither the Justice Department nor the FBI would comment to 60 Minutes. 

“We have examined so many photos, looked at the evidence, and talked to so many people,” Alfonsi said. “But we still have many questions. And we’re looking forward to getting more answers.”

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeffrey-epstein-autopsy-a-closer-look-60-minutes-2020-01-05/

Phil Hartman Celebrity Crime

phil hartman

Phil Hartman was a Canadian American comedian who spent over eight years on Saturday Night Live and was starring in the popular television program News Radio when his life was cut short by his wife Brynn Omdahl.

Phil Hartman Murder

Phil Hartman and Brynn Omdahl were married in 1987 and it was the third time for the comedian. Unfortunately the marriage was not a happy one with allegations of domestic violence and drug abuse. According to sources Brynn Omdahl was struggling with drug addiction and was not happy that Phil Hartman career kept him out of town for long periods of time.

On the night of the murder, May 28 1998, the married couple were arguing about Brynn Omdahl addictions and Phil Hartman was talking about ending the marriage. Phil Hartman would go to sleep and soon after he would be fatally shot by Brynn who would then use the gun on herself.

Phil Hartman was forty nine years old at the time of his murder.

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Former “Saturday Night Live” comic Phil Hartman was shot to death early Thursday, apparently by his wife, who killed herself as police were shepherding the couple’s two children from the family’s million-dollar Encino home.

Officers responding to a call of shots fired at the home arrived to find the couple’s 9-year-old, Sean, fleeing out the front door. They took the boy to safety, then returned to get his 6-year-old sister, Birgen. A single shot was heard–Hartman’s wife, Brynn Hartman, 41, apparently killed herself as police took her daughter from the home.

Upon searching the home, police found the Hartmans dead in the couple’s upstairs bedroom in their home in the 5000 block of Encino Avenue, a tree-lined street of pricey homes just north of Ventura Boulevard.

Phil Hartman, 49, clad in boxer shorts and a T-shirt, was lying on his side on the bloody bed.

Brynn Hartman, in a two-piece sleep suit, was on her back.

There was no sign of a struggle, police said.

The two young children, who police said suffered no physical injuries, were distraught as they were escorted away in their pajamas to a police station for questioning, authorities said. A family spokesman said relatives were flying into Los Angeles on Thursday evening to take custody of the children.

Although the coroner’s office did not release a time of death, police believed that Brynn Hartman killed her husband before they reached the house at 6:20 a.m.

“Mr. Hartman had been dead for a while,” police spokesman Lt. Anthony Alba said.

The apparent murder-suicide shocked fellow stars and longtime friends of Hartman, a gifted mimic who was known for masterful impersonations of such figures as President Bill Clinton and Liberace.

Phil Hartman starred in the current NBC situation comedy “NewsRadio,” provided voices for “The Simpsons,” and appears in “Small Soldiers,” a movie set for release next month. He joins Chris Farley, John Belushi and Gilda Radner in the ranks of “Saturday Night Live” alumni who have suffered untimely deaths.

“This is a tragedy in so many ways,” said Mike Scully, executive producer of “The Simpsons,” the animated series for which Hartman supplied the voices of such recurring bit characters as washed-up actor Troy McClure and lawyer Lionel Hutz. “Phil was just tremendous fun to work with. The minute he said hello, you were laughing.”

Some close to the family said the slayings seemed a shocking final burst of anger from Brynn Hartman, who they described as having a mercurial temper.

“She had trouble controlling her anger,” said Steve Small, an attorney who handled Hartman’s two previous divorces and stayed in frequent contact with Hartman.

“She got attention by losing her temper,” said Small, adding that the two had separated more than once. “Phil said he had to . . . restrain her at times.”

Police said they were unaware of any previous visits to the Hartman residence. The couple had been married since 1987.

Reached at their home in North Dakota, Brynn Hartman’s family declined to comment. “We’re still in shock,” her mother, Constance Omdahl, told the Grand Forks (N.D.) Herald.

Stan Rosenfield, a spokesman for Brynn Hartman’s brother and sister, said the family was concerned for the welfare of the children.

“This a situation that occurred that redefines tragedy in every conceivable way,” Rosenfield said. “There are two very young children and their needs must be attended to.”

Craig Harvey, the coroner’s chief investigator, said police told him that a man was at the home when police arrived and that the man had placed a 911 call. Police declined to confirm the account.

Harvey said police took two revolvers from the scene. A woman who described herself as a friend of Brynn Hartman said the former model, who recently changed her name from Vicki Jo, bought a gun upon relocating from New York to Los Angeles about six years ago because she felt unsafe in the family’s four-bedroom, five-bath, 4,000-square-foot home.

“She had guns in the house, but I begged her to get rid of them,” said the friend, who met Brynn shortly after she arrived in Los Angeles. “She didn’t feel safe in this house” because he worked long hours and she was alone with the children so much, the friend said.

The woman and her sister said they talked frequently with Brynn and knew of no marital discord. Both described Brynn Hartman as a doting mother who took great pride in her two children.

But other friends and neighbors said there were clues of trouble in the marriage, Phil Hartman’s third.

Andrea Diamond, who said she had been a friend of the couple for six years, said Brynn had spoken to her about problems in the marriage but “I didn’t take it seriously–he’s in the industry, those kinds of things happen all the time.”

“There were rumors,” Diamond said. “But you should have seen how he used to look at her. You could tell he loved her. I don’t know why she would do this to the kids.” Lisa Strain, Hartman’s second wife, said she was “completely shocked” when she heard about the deaths.

“He always talked about his children, and how he and Brynn were working it out,” said Strain, who divorced Hartman in 1985 but remained friends with him.

Hartman was born in Canada in 1948, and the family moved to Los Angeles in 1960. His father, Rupert, sold roofing supplies and building materials.

Phil Hartman attended schools in Westchester and showed an early interest in drama. During his junior high school years at Orville Wright Junior High, he shared the stage with Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme, who is serving a life sentence for the attempted assassination of then-President Gerald R. Ford.

Even after Hartman left Westchester and became famous, he never lost touch with old friends and remained down to earth, a comment repeated over and over during interviews Thursday.

Nora Kanoy, 49, said Hartman was her first love during the time the two attended elementary school together. Back in town for a high school reunion, Hartman paid her a visit.

“We barbecued at the beach. We talked about old times and he met my girls, which they loved,” Kanoy said. “He wasn’t bigheaded. He was always funny. He was an honest, good, down-to-earth person.”

Phil Hartman attended Santa Monica College and Cal State Northridge, where he majored in graphic design. An early highlight was designing the logo for Crosby, Stills & Nash.

In 1975, he joined the Groundlings, an improvisational Los Angeles comedy group. Tim Stack, a former member of the Groundlings, recalled the actor/comedian as a generous friend and devoted family man.

At a lunch the two men had at a San Fernando Valley deli two weeks ago, Hartman talked about reducing his workload this summer so that he could spend more time with his family.

Phil Hartman never talked of trouble within the family or marriage, Stack said. “In fact, that was the weird thing,” he recalled. “He had such great affection for Brynn. He said, ‘This is the one that’s for real.’ The crazy years were behind him.”

Phil Hartman helped create the Pee-wee Herman persona of comedian Paul Reubens after meeting him in 1978, and shared co-writing credit on the 1985 feature “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure.” However, his career didn’t really take off until he joined the cast of “Saturday Night Live” in 1986.

Hartman’s average looks and poker face helped him do imitations of more than 50 characters, including Ed McMahon, Ronald Reagan and Jack Nicholson.

NBC Entertainment President Warren Littlefield spoke of Hartman’s importance to “Saturday Night Live.”

“Phil just flourished there,” Littlefield said. “He was the go-to everyman. He became so many characters and such an integral part of the ensemble through some great years.”

Phil Hartman left “Saturday Night Live” in 1994. In 1990, he began doing regular voices on “The Simpsons” and in 1995, he began starring in the role of a self-centered and arrogant anchor on “NewsRadio.” Littlefield said no decision has yet been made about the future of “NewsRadio,” which is scheduled to return in the fall.

Phil Hartman was also active in the community, participating in such causes as Heal the Bay, to restore the Santa Monica Bay, and the Museum of Flying in Santa Monica. He also served as honorary sheriff of Encino.

With material success secured, friends and family said, the Hartmans had increasingly expressed a desire in recent years to focus on their children.

Their son Sean was a particular source of pride, according to Stack. He followed in his father’s footsteps as a graphic artist, and Hartman would brag that the boy’s talent far exceeded his own. Daughter Birgen, other friends said, had Hartman’s gift for comedy.

Hartman’s death, friends said, came at the peak of a long climb toward success.

“I have a plane. I have a boat. I have a great house. I have a great family. In fact I have everything I ever wanted,” film director Joe Dante recalled Hartman telling him recently. “It feels great.”

https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-phil-hartman-19980529-20160521-snap-htmlstory.html

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