Jeffrey Epstein's death in 2019 spawned endless conspiracy theories about what really happened that August morning.
The disgraced financier's suicide raised more questions than it answered.
And the FBI just exposed one sick detail about a Jeffrey Epstein letter that left investigators stunned.
The Setup Was Almost Perfect
The Department of Justice dropped a bombshell when it released a handwritten letter allegedly from Jeffrey Epstein to another convicted sex offender, disgraced USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar.
The letter was postmarked August 13, 2019 — three days after guards found Epstein's body hanging in his Metropolitan Correctional Center cell.
"Dear L.N.," the letter began. "As you know by now, I have taken the 'short route' home. Good luck!"
The sicko author tried justifying both men's perversions, writing: "We shared one thing … our love & caring for young ladies and the hope they'd reach their full potential."
Then came the poison pill Democrats had been waiting for.
"Our president also shares our love of young, nubile girls," the fake letter claimed. "When a young beauty walked by he loved to 'grab s—ch,' whereas we ended up snatching grub in the mess halls of the system."
Someone spent considerable time crafting the perfect October surprise weapon — a "suicide letter" from a dead pedophile directly implicating Trump in sex crimes.
The FBI destroyed it in hours.
"After further review, the FBI has confirmed this alleged letter from Jeffrey Epstein to Larry Nassar is FAKE," the Department announced.
The handwriting didn't match Epstein's. The postmark came from Northern Virginia, not New York City. The return address didn't include Epstein's inmate number. And the jail name was wrong — "Manhattan Correctional" instead of "Metropolitan Correctional."
Every single detail screamed forgery to anyone actually investigating rather than weaponizing.
Follow The Timeline — It Tells You Everything
Here's what really happened and why it matters.
August 10, 2019: Epstein dies in his cell under impossibly suspicious circumstances. Guards asleep. Cameras malfunctioning. Cellmate conveniently transferred. Injuries consistent with strangulation rather than hanging.
August 13, 2019: A fake "suicide letter" gets postmarked from Northern Virginia — not from the New York prison where Epstein died three days earlier.
September 2019: The letter bounces back to the MCC marked "undeliverable" because Nassar isn't at the Arizona facility. It sits in prison mail for weeks. Nobody questions why a dead man is receiving returned mail.
July 31, 2020: The FBI suddenly submits the letter for handwriting analysis. That's three months before the 2020 election. Perfect timing for an October surprise if the analysis came back "inconclusive" rather than definitively fake.
Someone manufactured evidence specifically designed to tie Trump to Epstein's crimes, then inserted it into the federal prison system where it would be "discovered" at precisely the right political moment.
The DOJ statement makes this crystal clear: the nearly 30,000 pages of Epstein files included "untrue and sensationalist claims made against President Trump that were submitted to the FBI right before the 2020 election."
"To be clear: the claims are unfounded and false, and if they had a shred of credibility, they certainly would have been weaponized against President Trump already," the DOJ added.
Think about what that means. The DOJ is admitting that political operatives submitted false evidence to the FBI specifically timed for electoral impact.
Why This Is Bigger Than One Fake Letter
Nassar was sentenced in January 2018 to 40 to 175 years in prison after sexually abusing hundreds of female gymnasts including Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles and Aly Raisman.¹
Epstein died August 10, 2019, while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges.
Public opinion polls showed only 16% of Americans believed Epstein committed suicide, with 45% believing he was murdered.²
That's the environment in which this fake letter appeared — maximum public suspicion about Epstein's death, maximum political pressure on Trump heading into 2020.
Someone looked at that landscape and thought: "We can exploit this."
They forged a letter from a dead pedophile to another pedophile. They included false accusations against Trump. They backdated it to three days after Epstein's death to make it look like a genuine "suicide note." They got it postmarked from Virginia to avoid New York prison protocols. And they fed it into the system where "discovery" by prison officials would make it look authentic.
The only thing they didn't count on? Actual investigators doing their jobs rather than playing politics.
The fake letter exposes something far more disturbing than one forged document. It reveals a coordinated effort to manufacture evidence against Trump using the federal prison system and the nation's most notorious pedophile case as cover.
How many people had to be involved to pull this off? Who postmarked the letter in Virginia? How did it get past prison mail inspectors? Who "discovered" it weeks later? Who decided July 2020 was the perfect time to submit it for analysis?
Those questions haven't been answered. But the DOJ's own statement confirms what happened: political operatives submitted false evidence to the FBI before the 2020 election, hoping it would be weaponized against Trump.
They got caught. This time.
How many other times did manufactured evidence make it through the system without detection? How many "anonymous tips" and "confidential sources" during Trump's first term were actually political operatives manufacturing lies?
The fake Epstein letter isn't just about one forged document. It's proof that Trump's enemies will exploit dead pedophiles, forge evidence, and corrupt federal law enforcement to destroy him.
And they almost got away with it.
¹ Samuel Chamberlain, "Jeffrey Epstein jailhouse letter about suicide to Larry Nassar deemed fake by FBI," New York Post, December 23, 2025.
² "Death of Jeffrey Epstein," Wikipedia, accessed December 23, 2025.










