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Trump’s FBI says ‘Epstein’ prison postcard to pedophile Larry Nassar is FAKE

The prison postcard that Jeffrey Epstein allegedly wrote to Larry Nassar before committing suicide and that was included in the Epstein files was determined to be fake by the FBI.

The content of the article, which was allegedly written before Epstein’s cell suicide in 2019, included the claim that ‘our president’ loves ‘young, attractive girls’. Donald Trump was president at the time, although no name was given.

It was published as part of a huge trove of files on the disgraced financier’s crimes and subsequent death. The Justice Department has been releasing more documents since last Friday.

Today’s post also included a postcard purportedly stating that Epstein was taking a ‘shortcut home’ and wishing well to the former US Olympic doctor responsible for the biggest sexual abuse scandal in American sports history.

But despite being part of an official government document, the FBI said the postcard was a fake, citing handwriting and stamp inconsistencies.

The Department of Justice posted just before 3:30pm on Tuesday: ‘FBI confirms Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged letter to Larry Nassar is FORGED.

‘The forged letter was received by the prison and flagged for the FBI at the time. The FBI reached this conclusion based on the following facts.

‘The article does not appear to match Jeffrey Epstein’s. The letter was postmarked three days after Epstein’s death in Northern Virginia, where he was incarcerated in New York.

Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein in a photo released by the Department of Justice

Picture: The disgraced financier's alleged last correspondence before he was found dead in his cell. FBI says postcard is fake, citing multiple inconsistencies

Picture: The disgraced financier’s alleged last correspondence before he was found dead in his cell. FBI says postcard is fake, citing multiple inconsistencies

Epstein's letter to Larry Nassar, postmarked August 13, 2019, was believed to have been returned to its sender in a New York prison mailroom after his death. FBI claimed the postcard was fake

Epstein’s letter to Larry Nassar, postmarked August 13, 2019, was believed to have been returned to its sender in a New York prison mailroom after his death. FBI claimed the postcard was fake

‘The sender address did not list the prison where Epstein was being held and did not contain the inmate number required for outgoing mail.

‘This fake letter is a reminder that the release of a document by the Department of Justice does not make the allegations or allegations in the document true. However, the Department of Justice will continue to release all materials required by law.’

The handwritten note, allegedly penned by Epstein, read: ‘As you know, I took the “shortcut” home.

He continued: ‘Good luck! We shared one thing: our love and concern for young ladies in the hope that they would reach their full potential.

‘Our president shares our love for young and attractive girls. He liked to “grab” a young beauty when she passed him, whereas we found him grabbing food in the system’s cafeterias. Life isn’t fair.’

The postcard was signed ‘Sincerely, J. Epstein’ and read ‘LN’, Nassar’s initials. Trump has not been charged with misconduct in the Epstein child sex trafficking scandal.

The August 13, 2019 letter that Epstein sent to Nassar was believed to have been returned to its sender weeks later in a New York prison mailroom.

Nassar was serving at a facility in Sumterville, near Orlando, Florida, at the time Epstein wrote his letter. He was moved from federal prison in Tucson, Arizona, in August 2018 after his lawyers said he was assaulted.

The return to sender stamp indicated that the recipient was ‘no longer present’ at the address.

While this was the first time the postcard was shared with the public during the Justice Department’s extensive release of evidence related to Epstein, the Associated Press reported on its existence in 2023.

“Apparently he sent it in the mail and it was sent back to him,” the investigator who found the postcard told a prison official at the time, according to the AP.

‘I’m not sure if I should open it or give it to someone?’

However, the FBI has now claimed that the postcard was fake.

Nassar pleaded guilty to obtaining and possessing child pornography and destroying evidence and was sentenced to 60 years in prison in December 2017.

Nassar is a former US Olympic doctor who was convicted of sexual assault in 2017.

Nassar is a former US Olympic doctor who was convicted of sexual assault in 2017.

The convicted sex offender abused nearly 300 athletes under the guise of medical care.

Olympic gold medalists Simone Biles, 28, and McKayla Maroney, 30, were among his many young victims.

“He abused my trust, abused my body, and left scars on my soul that will never go away,” Maroney wrote in a heartbreaking victim impact statement read aloud in court during Nassar’s trial.

“I do not want another young gymnast, Olympian, or any individual to experience the horror that I and hundreds of others have endured before, during, and continue today in the wake of the Larry Nassar abuse,” Biles said in testimony before Congress in 2021.

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