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FBI and DOJ’s version of Epstein cell door video does not cut out ‘missing minute,’ source says

A government source told CBS News that investigators, including the FBI and DOJ, have footage of Epstein’s jail video with the full time interval intact, despite a public time-stamp jump that raised tampering concerns.

Erin Keller
In Ohio
Tuesday 29 July 2025 18:53 BST
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Timecode jump reveals missing minute in Epstein prison tape

A federal source told CBS News that the so-called “missing minute” in the jail video from the Manhattan Metropolitan Correctional Center, where Jeffrey Epstein died in 2019, may never have been missing.

When the Department of Justice and FBI released nearly 11 hours of surveillance video earlier this month, viewers noticed a time‑stamp jump just before midnight, from 11:58:58 p.m. directly to 12:00:00 a.m. This prompted widespread speculation that footage was deliberately withheld, raising suspicions surrounding the billionaire sex trafficker’s true cause of death.

However, in a report published on Tuesday, a government source claims that investigators, including the FBI, the Bureau of Prisons, and the DOJ Inspector General, have a copy of the footage that includes the intact time interval.

The DOJ and FBI had publicly described the released surveillance as the “full raw” recording from the Special Housing Unit where Epstein was held. Anyone attempting to enter the tier would have been captured on video, officials say.

What remains unclear is why part of the footage was missing from the FBI’s release, even though officials described it as unedited. Officials added that the recording came from the the only functioning camera in the unit and cited it as key evidence supporting the conclusion that Epstein died by suicide.

A government source tells CBS News that investigators have a version of the Epstein footage with the full time interval intact.
A government source tells CBS News that investigators have a version of the Epstein footage with the full time interval intact. (Getty)

Attorney General Pam Bondi previously explained the timestamp gap as a result of an outdated system reset, typical of the prison’s “1999” recording infrastructure, which she said caused a one‑minute lapse every night. However, surveillance experts interviewed by CBS News described such nightly resets as highly unusual in modern systems.

Video forensic analyst Jim Stafford told the outlet that metadata showed the footage was created on May 23 and appeared to be a screen capture rather than a direct export of the raw file. He also found that the video was actually two separate clips stitched together and slightly sped up, with 11 hours of footage condensed into about 10 hours and 53 minutes.

Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Mike Johnson and Rep. Thomas Massie, are pushing for broader access, deepening GOP divisions over whether records should be unsealed.

Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide on August 10, 2019, at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City.
Jeffrey Epstein died by suicide on August 10, 2019, at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City. (Florida Department of Law Enforcement)

Internally, tensions have risen within the administration, with FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino reportedly clashing with Bondi over the files, and even considering resigning in protest.

Despite DOJ denials of a "client list" or foul play, the controversy over the edited surveillance video has intensified public skepticism and calls for accountability.

The Independent has contacted the FBI and Justice Department for comment.

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