Footage tied to Jeffrey Epstein’s death in federal custody appears to have been altered before it was shared with the public—despite being presented as unedited surveillance video—according to a joint investigation by WIRED and multiple independent video forensics experts.
Here’s what the analysis uncovered:
Hidden metadata embedded in the video file revealed that the footage wasn’t a direct export from the prison’s internal surveillance system. Instead, the file had been processed—apparently using Adobe Premiere Pro, a professional-grade video editing program. Evidence suggests it was stitched together from at least two separate clips, saved multiple times, and exported before being posted on the Department of Justice’s website as if it were “raw” footage.
Experts stop short of calling it tampered or falsified; the changes may have been as mundane as formatting for public release. But without a clear chain of custody or explanation from the DOJ, the fact that professional editing software was used—and that the video underwent multiple saves—raises uncomfortable questions. In a case already surrounded by suspicion, this ambiguity adds fuel to long-simmering conspiracy theories.
Complicating matters, this week began with Axios reporting that both the FBI and DOJ had firmly concluded that Epstein died by suicide, that no “client list” existed implicating others in his sex-trafficking network, and that there was no credible evidence of a blackmail operation targeting powerful figures. The report immediately ignited political infighting among factions within the Trump administration and conservative media.
Sources including Axios and commentator Laura Loomer claim FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino abruptly took Friday off following a heated disagreement with Attorney General Pam Bondi over the decision to release the video, which reportedly contains a “missing minute” of footage.
The controversy has reopened deep rifts and reinforced public distrust—not only about Epstein’s death, but about how truth is handled at the highest levels of government.