Seven years later, and one of the strangest details surrounding Jeffrey Epstein’s death refuses to go away: an unidentified orange figure caught on surveillance video near his jail cell on the night before he died.
Former correction officer Tova Noel testified before the House Oversight Committee last month that the mysterious shape captured climbing stairs to Epstein’s tier in the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City on August 9, 2019, was not her. She was adamant about it, telling Congress:“To be very honest, I don’t know what it is, who it is, because I never went back to the tier, and I was never carrying anything orange at all, and I never issued anything orange to anyone in the SHU—not just only Epstein, just anyone.”
The context matters here. Epstein was found dead in his cell in the Special Housing Unit the following day, and the NYC Medical Examiner ruled his death a suicide. Noel herself was fired for failing to perform required cell checks. Yet conspiracy theories about whether the financier—awaiting trial for child sex trafficking—was actually murdered have persisted ever since. The mysterious orange figure has become a focal point for those skeptical of the official narrative, and now we have congressional testimony from someone in position to know what should and shouldn’t have been in that facility on that night.
What makes Noel’s testimony particularly noteworthy is that she’s not defending herself by explaining away the figure—she’s genuinely confused. She wasn’t even present in that section of the jail while the cameras were rolling. That leaves the question wide open: who or what was caught on that footage, and why has it remained unresolved for this long?
The House committee released the transcript Thursday, reopening a door that many thought had been closed. Sometimes a single detail—a shape on a grainy security camera, an unexplained presence—can define how people view an entire story for years to come. This one certainly has.
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Local Lawton
Local Lawton is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.