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1
SWORN STATEMENT
OF
OIG CASE #:
2019-010614
JUNE 14, 2021
28632 Roadside Drive, Suite 285
Agoura Hills, CA 91301
Phone:
EFTA00114184
2
APPEARANCES:
BY:
BY:
WITNESS:
NONE
EFTA00114185
3
1
MR.
: The recorder is on and
2 it's currently June 14, 2021 at approximately
3 9:37 a.m.
4
MR.
: My name is
5 I'm a Special Agent with the U.S. Department of
6 Justice Office of the Inspector General New
7 York Field Office. And these are my
8 credentials. I'll show it to you again.
9
MS.
: Thank you.
10
MR.
: This interview with Federal
11 Bureau of Prisons Correctional Officer
12
. Did I get
13 that right?
14
MS.
: That's correct.
15
MR.
: And she is being interviewed
16 as part of an official U.S. Department of
17 Justice Office of the Inspector General
18 investigation. Today is June 14th and the time
19 is approximately 9:35 a.m.
The interview is
20 being conducted on the third-floor telephone
21 monitor room of the Metropolitan Correction
22 Center. Also present is DOJ OIG Senior Special
23 Agent
Can you pronounce your last name
24 please?
25
MR.
. And
EFTA00114186
4
1 these are my credentials.
2
MS.
: Thank you.
3
MR.
: And Lieutenant
4
. This interview will be
5 recorded by me, Special Agent
6 Can everyone please identify themselves for the
7 record and spell their last name. To start
8 again, I am DOJ OIG Special Agent
9
10
MR.
: Senior Special Agent
11
12
MS.
: Lieutenant
13
14 1.
15
MR.
: This is official DOJ OIG
16 investigation into the death of inmate Jeffrey
17 Epstein and everything in response that time
18 period. And you're being asked to voluntarily
19 provide some answers to our questions. Will
20 you agree to a voluntary interview with the DOJ
21 OIG?
22
MS.
: Yes.
23
MR.
: I'm going to provide you with
24 a form, DOJ OIG Form 3-226-2. The title of the
25 form is Warnings and Assurances to Employee
EFTA00114187
5
1 Requested to Provide Information on a Voluntary
2 Basis. I'm going to read it out to you first.
3 And then I'll let you review it also. You are
4 being asked to provide information as part of
5 an investigation being conducted by the Office
6 of the Inspector General. This investigation
7 is being conducted pursuant to the Inspector
8 General Act of 1978 as amended. This
9 investigation pertains to job performance
10 failure and security failure. This is a
11 voluntary interview. Accordingly, you do not
12 have to answer any questions. No disciplinary
13 action will be taken against you if you choose
14 not to answer any questions. Any statement you
15 furnish may be used as evidence in any future
16 criminal proceedings, or agency disciplinary
17 proceedings, and/or both. Now this is the
18 waiver part. This is for you. I understand
19 the Warnings and Assurances stated above and I
20 am willing to make a statement and answer
21 questions. No promises or threats have been
22 made to me and no pressure or coercion of any
23 kind has been used against me. Do you
24 understand?
25
MS.
: I understand.
EFTA00114188
6
1
MR.
: Do you want to move forward
2 with the interview?
3
MS.
: Yes.
4
MR.
: Please sign your name and
5 print your name.
6
MR.
: Let's just say thank you
7 for signing and (Indiscernible *00:03:37).
8
MR.
: Thank you for signing the
9 form. I myself am signing the form. I'm going
10 to print my name on it. And Agent
is
11 also going to do it.
12
MR.
: Thank you SA
for
13 signing and dating 6/14/2021 at 9:38 a.m. This
14 is SSA
and I am now signing as the
15 witness and printing my name as a witness.
16
MR.
: Again, thank you,
17 Before starting the interview, I would like to
18 place you under oath. Lieutenant
, can
19 you please raise your right hand? Do you swear
20 to tell the truth and nothing but the truth
21 during this interview?
22
MS.
: I do to the best of
23 my knowledge and belief.
24
MR.
: Thank you. Please let me
25 know if you do not understand any questions and
EFTA00114189
7
1 I will repeat it or try to rephrase it. I ask
2 that you do not try to guess answers. If you
3 don't know, just say you don't know.
4
MS.
: Okay.
5
MR.
: Thank you. So we'll go
6 through a little bit of your background before
7 we get in. What is your current home address?
8
MS.
9
, Brooklyn, New York
10 11209.
11
MR.
: Thank you. What is your date
12 of birth?
13
MS.
14
MR.
: And your Social Security
15 Number.
16
MS.
17
MR.
: What is your current cell
18 phone number?
19
MS.
20
MR.
: What is your highest level of
21 education?
22
MS.
: I have some college.
23
MR.
: What did you do prior to
24 working for the bop?
25
MS.
: I was in the
EFTA00114190
8
1 military.
2
MR.
: Thank you for your service.
3 What branch?
4
MS.
: The Navy.
5
MR.
: How many years?
6
MS.
: Eight.
7
MR.
: Alright. And how long have
8 you served with the Federal Bureau of Prisons?
9
MS.
: Twenty-six years.
10
MR.
: Do you remember when you
11 started? What year you started?
12
MS.
: December 11, 1994.
13
MR.
: When did you graduate from
14 bop training? It was soon after?
15
MS.
: No. I went to
16 Glencoe. I know it was probably six months to
17 a year after I started.
18
MR.
: Okay.
19
MS.
: I don't' remember the
20 exact date. But it was in `95.
21
MR.
: '95?
22
MS.
: Yeah, it was in 1995.
23 I don't remember the month.
24
MR.
: That's fine. When and where
25 was your first office assignment with the BOP?
EFTA00114191
9
1
MS.
: FCI Terminal Island.
2
MR.
: And after that, how long were
3 you at Terminal Island for?
4
MS.
: For probably around
5 six to seven months. I resigned and took a
6 position in San
7
MR.
: You resigned the position
8 altogether? Or did you get a transfer?
9
MS.
: The way that they did
10 it was they had me resign and then they picked
11 me up in San
12
MR.
: Okay. So -.
13
MS.
: It's the way that
14 they had me do it.
15
MR.
: Was there a break in
16 service?
17
MS.
: No. There was no
18 break in service. No.
19
MR.
: At Terminal Island, what was
20 your position?
21
MS.
: I was a correctional
22 officer.
23
MR.
: Okay. And then six months
24 alter you went over to San
25
MS.
: As a correctional
EFTA00114192
10
1 officer.
2
MR.
: Okay. How long were you
3 there for?
4
MS.
: A little over ten
5 years.
6
MR.
: Ten years.
7
MS.
: Yes.
8
MR.
: San
. Okay. And what
9 other positions have you held with the BOP?
10
MS.
: Correctional
11 Counselor and currently as a lieutenant.
12
MR.
: When did you get promoted as
13 a counselor?
14
MS.
: In I believe it was -
15
I started in I believe it was July of 2005.
16
MR.
: July 2005.
17
MS.
: Mm-hmm.
18
MR.
: Alright. And then after
19 counselor, you got promoted as -.
20
MS.
: A lieutenant.
21
MR.
: Lieutenant. And when was
22 that?
23
MS.
: That was in 2010. I
24 believe it was December 2010 that I
25 transferred.
EFTA00114193
11
1
MR.
:
Where did you transfer?
2
MS.
:
FCI Jessup.
3
MR.
: Jessant?
4
MS.
:
Jessup.
5
MR.
: Jessup.
6
MS.
:
Jessup. In Georgia.
7
MR.
: Georgia. Okay. In 2010 you
8 transferred and that was a promotion to
9 lieutenant?
10
MS.
:
Yeah. Well as a
11 counselor I was already a 9. So I just I guess
12 lateral over in a sense to a GS9 lieutenant.
13
MR.
: Okay. In Jessup. Okay.
14
MS.
: Right.
15
MR.
: And how long were you in
16 Jessup for?
17
MS.
:
Up until I came here
18 in November of 2014.
19
MR.
: November 2014. Have you been
20 here ever since or did you have any transfers?
21
MS.
:
Not without trying to
22 leave. But yes, I've been here since 2014.
23 Yes.
24
MR.
: And were you transferred over
25 as a lieutenant?
EFTA00114194
12
1
MS.
: I was a lieutenant
2 when I was at Jessup. I went there as a 9. I
3 got my 11 and I just lateral over here as an
4 11.
5
MR.
: And have you been in that
6 position ever since?
7
MS.
: That depends on what
8 you mean by ever since. Have I been working in
9 the position or have I held that position?
10 I've held that position. I'm currently still a
11 lieutenant.
12
MR.
: Okay. And - bear with me.
13 On August 9th and 10th of 2019, what was your
14 position at the MCC?
15
MS.
: I was a lieutenant.
16
MR.
: Okay. And what shift did you
17 work on August 9th and 10th?
18
MS.
: I believe it was the
19 morning watch shift.
20
MR.
: What time does the morning
21 watch shift start?
22
MS.
: At that time, we were
23 coming in I believe it was from 10:00 to 6:00.
24 I think that's it. We would leave around 10:00
25 and then we got off - we got relieved at around
EFTA00114195
13
1 6:00.
2
MR. ■
3 a.m. and -?
4
MS. •
So you would come in at 10:00
: 10:00 p.m.
5
MR.
: 10:00 p.m. And leave at 6:00
6 a.m.?
7
MS.
: Well it depends on
8 what time our relief came. But those were the
9 hours that we were working around. Around that
10 time.
11
MR.
: Officially that's the
12 schedule?
13
MS.
: Officially, our hours
14 were midnight to 8:00. But we would come in
15 and relieve around, you know, between the hours
16 of 10:00 and 6:00. I'll put it like that.
17
MR.
: Understood. Okay. And who
18 was your supervisor when you worked at the MCC
19 on August 9th and 10th? Who did you report to?
20
MS.
: Then I think it was
21 Captain
. Yeah. I think it was Captain
22
We've had so many captains in and out
23 since I've been here, it's hard to keep track
24 sometimes. But yeah, it's Captain
25
MR.
: As a lieutenant, where were
EFTA00114196
14
1 you assigned during August 9th and 10th where
2 were you assigned?
3
MS.
: I was operations
4 lieutenant.
5
MR.
: Okay. And as an operations
6 lieutenant, what are your daily duties?
7
MS.
: We supervise staff
8 and of course the inmate population. We're
9 responsible for the safety and security of the
10 inmate staff and the institution. We do - we
11 hire overtime. We make runs throughout the
12 institution. And do various other duties. We
13 have checks and balances that we have to do
14 throughout the night.
15
MR.
: Okay. As a supervisor, who
16 did you supervise?
17
MS.
: I supervised the
18 inmate population and of course the staff that
19 worked for me during that shift.
20
MR.
: Do you remember who you r
21 staff was during that shift?
22
MS.
: Ooh, all of them?
23 No. No I do not.
24
MR.
: Any key people you
25 communicated with?
EFTA00114197
15
1
MS.
: I mean I communicate
2 with all my staff.
3
MR.
: Okay.
4
MS.
: There is not one
5 person during the course of a shift that I
6 don't communicate with. Especially when I'm
7 making rounds. And especially during that
8 time, I communicated with them even more
9 because we were below the bottom of the barrel
10 then when it came to staffing. So we really
11 didn't have a lot of -. We didn't have anybody
12 back then. We didn't even have enough staff at
13 that time to even respond to body alarms. Or
14 to do uses or forces. You know. Especially on
15 morning watch. It's already tight. But we was
16 even tighter. So that was one of those nights
17 when as much as -. Well that night as like
18 every other night. As much as possible I tried
19 to talk to staff because staff were doing back-
20 to-back mandations then. And you had staff
21 that were being mandated every day of the week
22 Monday through Sunday. Or Sunday through
23 Saturday as we say in Bureau. Because that's
24 when our week officially starts - Sunday.
25
MR.
: When you say mandated what do
EFTA00114198
16
1 you mean by that?
2
MS.
: Mandations are
3 mandatory overtime. That's when you've
4 exhausted your overtime roster. That's the
5 people that sign up for overtime. You've gone
6 through that. There's no one available. Or
7 you get everybody from that list that wants to
8 do overtime or that's available. Then you
9 announce it over the intercom system. That's
10 voluntary. Whoever wants overtime outside of
11 that, you can assign them overtime from there.
12 And then we go to mandatory overtime. That's
13 when we have nothing else left. And we have to
14 utilize the staff that we have currently on
15 duty that's not officially on a double-shift.
16 That's not officially on 16 hours.
17
MR.
: So I'm going to ask a couple
18 more questions. How many hours where COs
19 working during that time period? ON average?
20
MS.
: Sixteen plus because
21 -.
22
MR.
: Per day?
23
MS.
: Per day. Yes.
24 Because there were days when staff would be
25 late. There were days when there wasn't
EFTA00114199
17
1 anybody even after we mandated everybody on the
2 shift. We didn't have anybody to fill a bunch
3 of posts. We had vacated posts. We had a lot
4 of stuff. It was grueling during that time.
5 And I think we had been doing that for at least
6 a year if not more than a year.
7
MR.
: Okay.
8
MS.
: Mm-hmm.
9
MR.
: Did you previously meet with
10 agents regarding the Epstein investigation?
11
MS.
: I did.
12
MR.
: Do you recall meeting with
13 them on August 14, 2019 in regard to the
14 matter?
15
MS.
: I don't remember what
16 day it was. But yes, I recall meeting with
17 them.
18
MR.
: I have a summary of the
19 report. What I'm going to do is I'm going to
20 read it out to you. And once I read it out to
21 you, we're going to have some follow-up
22 questions because there's some holes in there
23 that we would like to fill. This is like the
24 summary part.
informed that she
25 had been employed with the Bureau of Prisons
EFTA00114200
18
1 since December 11, 1994 and promoted to
2 lieutenant around 2010 and has spent her entire
3 career working at the Metropolitan Correctional
4 Facility. During the interview,
5 described the duties -.
6
MR.
: Let her correct that.
7 It's not correct. So if you hear something
8 that's not correct --
9
MR.
: Yes, please.
10
MR.
: -- just say that that's
11 not correct.
12
MS.
: Okay.
13
MR.
: If you hear anything, please
14 interrupt me and I'll -.
15
MS.
: Okay. I was a
16 lieutenant prior to coming here. I had - as a
17 matter of fact, I was promoted. I was given a
18 temporary position not to exceed a year as a
19 lieutenant back in I think it was 2000, 2001
20 when I was at MCC San
in California. And
21 I did - even after that year expired, I
22 remained in the lieutenant's office for the
23 next three or four years after that until I
24 transferred. And so when I came here, when I
25 left there, I went to be a counselor. And then
EFTA00114201
19
1 I picked up my lieutenant position again in
2 Jessup. When I came here, I was already a
3 lieutenant. I didn't get promoted to the
4 lieutenant rank coming here.
5
MR.
: Okay.
6
MS.
: And I haven't spent
7 my whole career here at MCC New York. This is
8 my fifth institution.
9
MR.
: Okay.
10
MR.
: You said you've been here
11 since 2014.
12
MS.
: I've been here since
13 November of 2014.
14
MR.
: Okay. I'm going to keep
15 going. If you hear anything wrong, please -.
16
MS.
: Okay.
17
MR.
: During the interview,
18
described the duties and
19 responsibilities of the position as well as the
20 guards she supervises at the MCC.
21
is assigned to the midnight shift to 8:00
22 a.m. shift, but routinely arrives at 10:00 a.m.
23
MS.
: 10:00 p.m.
24
MR.
: 10:00 p.m. Sorry, I read
25 that wrong. In addition to describing her
EFTA00114202
20
1 administrative duties,
how
2 account at the MCC works and that the
3 lieutenants are responsible for supervising one
4 count per shift.
described that
5 during the count, two guards assigned to the
6 area are to unlock the main gate that separates
7 the cells from the open and common area where
8 the guards are. One guard will walk down range
9 and actually look into each cell and count the
10 number of prisoners inside. Once the count is
11 complete, the guard will return to the key and
12 exchange places with the guard that was left to
13 secure the gate. That guard will then walk
14 down range and count the number of prisoners in
15 the cells. Upon completion, the guard will
16 return to the gate, secure it from the outside,
17 and record the numbers that came from their
18 count. Those numbers will be compared to the
19 master list of prisoners on record for being
20 assigned to the south. In addition to the
21 numbers being recorded and compared to the
22 master list or the E-1 sheet, the guards will
23 call in or receive a call from internal and
24 give a verbal record of their count. And
25 internal.
EFTA00114203
21
1
MS.
: Wait a minute. What
2 is that again?
3
MR.
: I'll repeat that back. In
4 addition to the numbers being recorded and
5 compared to the master list or E-1 sheet, the
6 guards will call in or receive a call from
7 internal.
8
MS.
: That's not true.
9
MR.
: Go ahead. You can tell me.
10
MS.
: When the officers
11 take the count, once they have gone around to
12 each range and both of them had counted each
13 range, before they leave that range, they will
14 compare their count for that particular range.
15 And they would do that in each subsequent
16 range. When they've completed, they call the
17 control center. And they will call in their
18 unit. They will call in the count that they
19 got for that particular unit. They will give
20 them their name, who conducted the count, and
21 at that time, the control center will let them
22 know whether they have a good count or a bad
23 count. Internals position is to pick up those
24 count slips after each unit has counted and
25 place those counts slips out into their
EFTA00114204
22
1 respective sally port to be picked up by
2 internal. They do not call. Internal has
3 absolutely nothing to do with their count
4 unless they get a bad count. Sometimes
5 internal, or if we have other extra staff, they
6 will go up there and they will assist them with
7 the count. You know just to see maybe if one
8 of them miscounted or something like that.
9 They would just be like an additional person.
10 A new set of eyes, basically, to assist them
11 with the count.
12
MR.
: So before I continue, I had a
13 question for you. Can you sat the difference
14 between internal and control? What exactly
15 their duties are?
16
MS.
: The internal officer
17 is an officer who mans the elevator. He's
18 responsible for moving inmates around in the
19 institution. He has - they have checks and
20 stuff that they do throughout their shift. But
21 mainly they're responsible for moving inmates
22 up throughout the institution. They respond to
23 body alarms. They pick up the count slips.
24 And they just have general duties throughout
25 the night. They assist with the count
EFTA00114205
23
1 throughout the night. But yes, once those
2 officers if they was to get a bad count, they
3 count again. And then if they get another bad
4 count, a subsequent bad count, then internal or
5 whoever else we have available at the time
6 that's not assigned to doing something else
7 will go in and conduct another count. But
8 internal would never just - they never report
9 to internal the results of their count.
10
MR.
: I was just going to ask.
11 On this if she's able to identify during her
12 shift who was internal.
13
MR.
: Do you remember who was an
14 internal that night?
15
MS.
: That night? No.
16
MR.
: What about control?
17
MS.
: No. I don't. And I
18 don't want to guess.
19
MR.
: And that's why I gave him
20
This is the official duty roster from those
21 nights. See I didn't expect you to remember.
22 That's why I was just asking if you were table
23 to look at these
24
MS.
: Yeah.
25
MR.
: -- things and be able to
EFTA00114206
24
1 determine who it is that actually -. I think
2 this is you. you were on the 10th. So -.
3
MR.
: So we're going to present you
4 with two rosters. One from August 9th, 2019.
5
MR.
: Well I don't think you
6 were on August 9th. Well I guess you were at
7 the 10:00 p.m. So -.
8
MR.
: The 10:00 p.m. And she
9 worked an overnight too. Right? So from
10 August 9th and then also from August 10th. So
11 I'm going to mark it Exhibit 1 on August 9th.
12 And Exhibit 2 for August 10th.
13
MS.
: Okay. This is August
14 10th.
15
MR.
: Can you take a look and let
16 me know who the internal was and who the
17 control was for those nights?
18
MS.
: For both nights?
19
MR.
: Yes, please.
20
MS.
: Okay. I'm currently
21 looking at the assignment roster for Friday,
22 August 9, 2019.
23
MR.
: Let's start with that
24 afternoon. And then the evening.
25
MS.
: You want day watch?
EFTA00114207
25
1
MR.
: Yeah. Again, you can go
2 through it.
3
MS.
: Okay. On Friday,
4 August 9, 2019, the day watch. You wanted the
5 control room or you wanted -?
6
MR.
: Let's do control room first.
7
MS.
: The control room
8 number one was Officer
9
MR.
: Please spell that. I don't
10 have it. Just for the record. Can you spell
11 the name on that?
12
MS.
: Yes.
13
MR.
: Okay. Officer
14
MS.
: Yes. And his control
15 number two officer was Officer
16 I. For the evening watch shift,
17 would have been the control number one officer.
18 It seems like it appears. Ancl
19
, would have been the control two
20 according to this roster.
21
MR.
: And those were the people
22 that they would have called with the numbers.
23 Correct?
24
MS.
: They generally would
25 call the control number two.
EFTA00114208
26
1
MR.
: Okay. Control two.
2
MS.
: Control two. Yes.
3
MR.
: And who was that again?
4
MS.
: On day watch that
5 would have been
And on evening watch
6 that would have been
7
MR.
: Now as far as the counts,
8 who would have picked up the slips from
9 internal? Who was that?
10
MS.
: Internal during day
11 watch was Officer
who was overtime.
12 And for the evening watch shift, you had
13 Officer
and they had an internal
14 number two,
- Officer
15
MR.
: So they would have been
16 the people that like for instance would go to
17 the SHU and pick up the count slips?
18
MS.
: They would go to each
19 floor --
20
MR.
: Sure.
21
MS.
: -- and pick up all
22 the count slips for the entire institution.
23
MR.
: To include for the
24 special housing unit though?
25
MS.
: Everywhere.
EFTA00114209
27
1
MR.
: Great.
2
MS.
: Yes. Everywhere.
3 Whether that be medical - wherever we had
4 inmates at that time, they would have been
5 picking up those count slips. Or sometimes if
6 unit team or somebody like that is here. And
7 they're on the unit at the time, you know,
8 they'll say if they're on their way down
9 they'll say I'll take the count slip down. So
10 it just depends on what day it is and what we
11 have going on during that specific time. But
12 for the most part, when no one else has
13 delivered the count slips down, it would be
14
Well, on this day, Friday, August
15 9th. It would have been between
and
16
or both.
17
MR.
: Great. Do you mind just
18 - this is only so that we know what document
19 you're looking at - do you mind just initialing
20 and dating and then circling the people that
21 you just discussed?
22
MS.
: Do you want me to
23 date each one?
24
MR.
: No-no. I'm sorry. Just
25 on the top of the form, just an initial and a
EFTA00114210
28
1 date. And then you can just circle the name of
2 the people that you just said. Just for the
3 purposes of the documents that we discussed
4 will be attached to the transcript of this.
5 And it's just to make sure that we have the
6 right document. Thank you. We'll come back.
7
MR.
: So I'm going to also present
8 you with the roster for August 10, 2019. Can
9 you do the same for us again? Identify the
10 internal and the control officers?
11
MS.
: Okay.
12
MR.
: Do you want her to be
13 specific though between the hours of 6:00 and
14 8:00 a.m.?
15
MR.
: Yes. So specifically, 10
16 p.m.
17
MR.
: So between 10 p.m. and
18 6:00 a.m.
19
MR.
: I think the roster -. What's
20 the time that starts on the roster for August
21 10th? Midnight?
22
MS.
: Midnight. Yeah.
23
MR.
: So let's identify from
24 midnight to let's say
25
MR.
: 8:00 a.m. The same shift
EFTA00114211
29
1 that you were on.
2
MR.
: Yeah.
3
MS.
: Okay. So I'm looking
4 at the assignment roster for Saturday, August
5 10, 2019. The control number one officer was
6 Ms.
who is non-custody. She works in
7 the R&D - Receiving and Discharge department
8 for - she was on overtime. For day watch,
9 control number one is Officer
. Control
10 number two is Officer
(Phonetic Sp.
11 *00:27:07) who was on overtime. For evening
12 watch, in the control one position there was
13 Officer
and control two was Officer
14
who was also non-custody.
15
MR.
: Now when they - when the
16 SHU officers would call control for the counts
17 during that shift, who is it that they would
18 have called? And which counts would have been
19 called? For that shift? I think you said that
20 typically, actually it --
21
MS.
: Typically
22
MR.
: -- works from 10:00 p.m.
23 to 6:00 a.m. but it shows on their schedule
24 it's 12:00 to 8:00.
25
MS.
: Well the officers
EFTA00114212
30
1 were working those hours.
2
MR.
: Okay.
3
MS.
: The officers were
4 working --
5
MR.
: So just the lieutenants
6 were different?
7
MS.
: -- 12:00 to 8:00.
8 Yes. It was just the lieutenants.
9
MR.
: Okay. So if they
10 actually worked 12:00 to 8:00.
11
MS.
: To 8:00, 8:00 to
12 4:00, and 4:00 to midnight. That's correct.
13
MR.
: Okay. So who on the
14 schedule then when the special housing unit
15 officers would call in, who was it that they
16 would call into?
17
MS.
: They would normally
18 call control two. Now this is not all-
19 inclusive because if control two is busy,
20 sometimes they would call control one. Because
21 control two would be you know sometimes
22 handling back-to-back calls. And plus, they're
23 responsible for answering outside calls and
24 stuff to that nature as well. I mean when
25 people are calling in from eh outside, they
EFTA00114213
31
1 don't care if they miss count time or not. But
2 the control number two officers work from 6:00
3 to 2:00 to 2:00 to 10:00. Those were their
4 hours.
5
MR.
: Okay.
6
MS.
: Okay? And um.
7
MR.
: So 6:00 a.m. or 6:00
8 p.m.?
9
MS.
: The day watch would
10 work - or the a.m. shift as we call it. They
11 would work from 6:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
12
MR.
: Okay.
13
MS.
: And the p.m. shift
14 would work 2:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.
15
MR.
: Okay. So specifically in
16 the hours that you were working there, who
17 would have been called by the special housing
18 unit?
19
MS.
: Well like I said,
20 they would have been calling because I worked
21 morning watch. They would have been calling
22 There wouldn't have been a control two -.
23
MR.
: So that's -.
24
MS.
: Wait a minute.
25
MR.
: So that's so yeah. Let's
EFTA00114214
32
1 say for instance the 12:00 p.m. count, the 3:00
2 a.m. count, and the 5:00 a.m. count. Who would
3 have been called then on August 10th?
4
MS.
: They would have been
5 calling control number one because I don't
6 think they had, um
They would have been
7 calling -. I want to say they was calling
8 control number one. Because at this time, it
9 look like we had a control number two. Because
10 there was a time when internal number two would
11 fill in for the control number two. But it
12 doesn't look like this was during that time.
13
MR.
: To your best guess, who
14 of the officers in the special housing unit,
15 who would have been called? For the 12:00, the
16 3:00, and the 5:00 a.m. counts, who would have
17 been called on those?
18
MS.
: They would have been
19 calling the control center number one.
20
MR.
: And who was that?
21
MS.
: During the 12:00 to
22 8:00 shift that would have been Officer
23 who, like I said, was on overtime. She's non-
24 custody. She works in the R&D department.
25
MR.
: Okay.
EFTA00114215
33
1
MS.
: That's where she's
2 assigned.
3
MR.
: Okay. And then for those
4 same counts, 12:00 a.m., 3:00 a.m., and 5:00
5 a.m., who from internal would have collected
6 those slips?
7
MS.
: It could have been
8 either one of them.
9
MR.
: Okay.
10
MS.
: Because on morning
11 watch, it look like there was two. But I'm
12 trying to remember at that time if um -.
13 Because sometimes the internal two would assist
14 control because there were other things that
15 needed to be done. But you have for internal
16 there on morning watch there was Officer
17 and Officer
(Phonetic Sp. *00:31:14) who
18 was on overtime. Officer
was on overtime
19 for midnight to 8:00. So between those two,
20 they would have been picking up the count
21 slips.
22
MR.
: Just can you repeat those
23 two again?
24
MS.
: That's internal would
25 have been Officer
. And internal number
EFTA00114216
34
1 two was Officer
. And he was on overtime.
2
MR.
: Great. Thank you very
3 much.
4
MR.
: Can you do the same with
5 that? Just circle.
6
MR.
: Just circle the names
7 that you just mentioned and then just initial
8 and date on the top.
9
MS.
: Oh, you know what I'm
10 doing?
11
MR.
: It's -.
12
MS.
: I'm putting the date
13 of the roster on here.
14
MR.
: Yeah, I know. You want
15 to date it today. I'm sorry. So today is
16 6/14/21. Sorry. And I'm handing you back the
17 other roster so you can fix that.
18
MR.
: So the August 10th roster I'm
19 going to mark as Exhibit 2. And August 9th
20 will be Exhibit 1.
21
MR.
: I wouldn't.
this is -.
22 If you're doing exhibits, this is Exhibit 1.
23
MR.
: Alright.
24
MR.
: If you want to do that.
25
MR.
: Okay.
EFTA00114217
35
1
MR.
: Because we're probably
2 going to have to go back to this, I wouldn't
3 mark them as exhibits.
4
MR.
: Okay. No problem.
5
MR.
: Because this is always
6 going to be Exhibit 1.
7
MR.
: I understand. Just to
8 clarify before we move forward. How many
9 counts take place at the MCC? Daily?
10
MS.
: It depends. During
11 the week we have the
Let's start with day
12 watch. Day watch we have the 4:00 p.m. count.
13 Evening watch we have the 10:00 p.m. count.
14 Morning watch we have the 12:00 a.m., the 3:00
15 a.m., and the 5:00 a.m. So five. On weekends
16 and holidays, we have an additional count of
17 10:00 a.m. which is added for weekends and
18 holidays.
19
MR.
: Okay. Thank you. So I'm
20 going to go back and I'm going to continue
21 reading from that spot. So I'm going to reread
22 that line and we'll move forward.
23
MS.
: Okay.
24
MR.
: In addition to the numbers
25 being recorded and compared to the master list
EFTA00114218
36
1 or E-1 sheet, the guards will call in or
2 receive a call from internal and give a verbal
3 record of the account and internal will compare
4 that number to the number that they have on
5 file and advise the count matches and is good
6 or does not match and a count needs to be
7 conducted again. You clarified that. You
8 explained how the control and the internal
9 works. The count slips prepared by the guards
10 are then placed in the area for pickup by
11 another guard assigned in the MCC and brought
12 to control for review. In addition to the
13 official counts that are to be conducted at
14 specific times during each shift,
15
informed that the guards are also
16 responsible for conducing rounds every 30 to 40
17 minutes. During the rounds, the guards simply
18 walk the range and view that the prisoners are
19 alive and in their cells with no issues. The
20 number of prisoners is not recorded, but simply
21 the fact that a round was conducted. And the
22 officers who conducted it is. When asked,
23
stated that she has no knowledge
24 of rounds or counts not being conducted and
25 that no one would tell her if that were the
EFTA00114219
37
1 case.
2
MS.
: As far as the rounds
3 go, the rounds are irregular. So they're not
4 supposed to be done at the same time and
5 there's a reason for that. You know. So the
6 rounds are supposed to be conducted - are
7 usually conducted every hour and they're done
8 on an irregular basis. So that's how the
9 rounds are supposed to be done.
10
MR.
: So you say every hour,
11 it's not every 30 minutes?
12
MS.
: That would be in SHU.
13
MR.
: Okay.
14
MS.
: Special housing has
15 its own set of rules as far as the count goes
16 but on the other units, and even in SHU the
17 rounds are supposed to be irregular.
18
MR.
: Sure.
19
MS.
: They're not supposed
20 to be like every half hour or something like
21 that.
22
MR.
: Is it correct that it's
23 every 30 minutes but it's supposed to be
24 between 30 and 40 minutes?
25
MS.
: There's a little
EFTA00114220
38
1 hangover just for that --
2
MR.
: Sure.
3
MS.
: -- so that the rounds
4 can be irregular if you get tied up. Because
5 when you're making rounds, inmates will stop
6 you. They will hold conversations with you and
7 ask questions. You know and so it's hard to
8 keep those rounds within those guidelines
9 because there's always something to trip you
10 up. When you're making rounds you may notice
11 something out of place, so that would stop you.
12 But as far as those rounds getting conducted,
13 those rounds are supposed to be conducted on an
14 irregular basis. But do understand that there
15 are things that will trip you up. So sometimes
16 you may be on time. Sometimes you -. It's
17 hard to fall within those guidelines because
18 you're - it's live time. Everything is alive.
19 So you can't predict what's going to happen
20 while you're making your rounds.
21
MR.
: Understood. And that was a
22 summary of your interview. So as you can see,
23 we have a few questions we want to follow
24
MS.
: Right.
25
MR.
: And we've got -.
EFTA00114221
39
1
MS.
: You have medical
2 emergencies. You have inmates that are
3 complaining, wait until you start making your
4 rounds to complain about being in pain or
5 something that's hurting them. Or a lot of
6 general stuff. They'll ask you questions just
7 about anything when you're making rounds.
8
MR.
: Understood.
9
MS.
: Mm-hmm.
10
MR.
: I'm going to go back to my
11 interview now and I have a few questions for
12 you. If there were instructions of guidance
13 from upper management, how would you receive
14 them?
15
MS.
: It depends. During
16 that time, they made -. Whoever was in the
17 office may come and say something to the person
18 in the office. And it was left up to everybody
19 else to get that information from that
20 individual.
21
MR.
: Who was in the office at that
22 point? I mean is a certain person assigned to
23 the office or it could be anybody in the
24 office?
25
MS.
: Like the lieutenant.
EFTA00114222
40
1 Like a - when I say the office, I'm talking
2 about like the lieutenants' office. So
3 sometimes they would just - and more often than
4 not - they would just say something to whoever
5 is in the office. And that's how everybody is
6 supposed to get that information.
7
MR.
: If there were instructions
8 from the lieutenants, who would give it?
9
MS.
: We would expect the
10 captain to give it.
11
MR.
: Did the instructions that
12 would come from above the captain? Or was it
13 always from the captain?
14
MS.
: Um.... I don't -. I
15 mean, from time to time, some of the AWs would
16 put things out. But the normal chain would be
17 through the captain because that was our
18 immediate supervisor.
19
MR.
: Okay. If you had important
20 details to discuss with your subordinates or
21 COs who report to you, how would you
22 communicate that to them?
23
MS.
: One more time.
24
MR.
: If you had important details
25 or instructions you wanted to discuss with your
EFTA00114223
41
1 subordinates or COs, correctional officers, who
2 report to you, how would you communicate those
3 instructions to them?
4
MS.
: I usually did it when
5 I made my rounds. And I would tell them. But
6 you could also do a thing such as 3-3-3s. And
7 that way, that's when everybody come on the
8 line and you could do it that way. But you
9 really didn't have time. It was easier to just
10 tell everybody individually because that way
11 you're with them in person. and it's just
12 easier for you to do it at that time because if
13 they had questions, then they could ask you
14 questions. And when you're doing over the
15 phone at the hole, you're sitting in the
16 office. So you're really not getting anything
17 done, you know. At least if I'm making my
18 rounds, I'm getting my rounds done and I'm
19 doing my - passing down information to my staff
20 at the same time. And also it lets me know
21 that you got it. I'm telling you. it's just
22 you and me. There's no distractions in the
23 background. There's nothing else going on.
24 But it just depends on the person.
25
MR.
: Okay.
EFTA00114224
42
1
MS.
: How they got that
2 information to each individual staff.
3
MR.
: Would you communicate that
4 directly with your COs or would you tell
5 another CO to pass on the message?
6
MS.
: It depends on what
7 the information was. I mean things that you
8 want them to know and definitely. If it was
9 something that was a new policy or procedure or
10 something like that, you would definitely want
11 to tell them yourselves because at that time,
12 like I said, there wasn't anything coming out
13 in writing. That's generally how new policy
14 and procedure is put in place. You know you
15 either receive a memorandum saying starting
16 with this memorandum or starting with -
17 effective today or some other date, this is
18 what we're going to be doing. That's generally
19 how that information is put out. Or some type
20 of manual or something like that is updated.
21 Those are the ways that it's generally put out.
22 That way you have the information there and you
23 can refer back to it as needed.
24
MR.
: What if it involved an
25 inmate? Like certain instructions for certain
EFTA00114225
43
1 inmates. How would that come out? Would that
2 come out verbally or would that be written?
3
MS.
: It depends on, like I
4 say, the person that's delivering the
5 information. It depended on that.
6
MR.
: On August 9th when you came
7 on shift during that day, you said you were
8 working overnight.
9
MS.
: Yes.
10
MR.
: So technically, weren't you
11 on shift August 9th nighttime? Morning watch?
12 Do you remember?
13
MS.
: August 9th going into
14 August 10th.
15
MR.
: Okay.
16
MS.
: So -.
17
MR.
: Did you work the day before
18 too? You don't recall.
19
MS.
: I don't know if I did
20 or not. I may have.
21
MR.
: Let's try to focus -.
22
MS.
: Yeah. I don't know.
23
MR.
: No problem. So let's talk
24 about August -.
25
MR.
: Um, so if you're asking -
EFTA00114226
44
1
2
3
-
MS.
I work --
: What do you mean did
4
MR.
: -- specifically August
5 9th --
6
MS.
: -- day watch or -?
7
MR.
: It looks like she was on
8 from midnight to 8:00 the day before.
9
MR.
: Day before too.
10
MR.
: So that means you would
11 have left at 6:00 a.m. on August 9th.
12
MS.
: Right. And came back
13 -.
14
MR.
: And come back at 10:00
15 p.m.
16
MS.
: That's correct.
17
MR.
: So let's focus on 10:00
18 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. August 9th night going into
19 August 10th day.
20
MS.
: Right. Because I
21 don't think I worked evening watch.
22
MR.
: No there's a reason. Can I
23 ?
24
MR.
: Sure. I'm just saying
25 she's done at 6:00 a.m. not at 8:00.
EFTA00114227
45
1
MR.
: Yeah, that's what I wanted to
2 ask.
3
MS.
: Okay.
4
MR.
: So I just want to clarify.
5 That day, I know you don't recall back on the
6 schedule, what is that showing? What time did
7 you leave on August 9th morning?
8
MS.
: Oh. I would have
9 left probably - it depends on who was relieving
10 me. I probably would have left probably before
11 6:00.
12
MR.
: Before 6:00.
13
MS.
: Mm-hmm.
14
MR.
: Would you -?
15
MS.
: 6:00 a.m.
16
MR.
: 6:00 a.m. By 6:00 a.m.,
17 would you happen to have heard if there was an
18 inmate being removed from eh MCC? Or did that
19 come afterwards? Let's say they -.
20
MS.
: What on August 9th?
21
MR.
: August 9th.
22
MS.
: I don't recall. What
23 day did Epstein die? Because I don't even
24 remember what day he passed.
25
MR.
: August 10th.
EFTA00114228
46
1
MS.
: Okay.
2
MR.
: Well that's when he was
3 found.
4
MS.
: Okay.
5
MR.
: He was found August 10th
6 morning.
7
MS.
: So you said -.
8
MR.
: August 9th. That would be
9 Friday morning. Right? You left the shift it
10 looks like 6:00 a.m. Right?
11
MS.
: Which would have been
12 Saturday morning.
13
MR.
: No-no. Sorry. I should
14 clarify. August 9th --
15
MS.
: Oh.
16
MR.
: -- morning is Friday morning.
17
MS.
: Okay. Friday
18 morning.
19
MR.
: Friday morning, you did the
20 overnight shift. Then you left. And then you
21 came back August 9th, 10:00 p.m. and you worked
22 until 6:00 a.m.
23
MS.
: Right.
24
MR.
: Now I'm talking about August
25 9th -. Let's say August 8th 10:00 p.m. to
EFTA00114229
47
1 August 9th -.
2
MS.
: Oh my God.
3
MR.
: The reason I'm asking is I'm
4 just trying to clarify. Would you have known
5 if any instructions came about inmates having
6 to be brought out for court or anything like
7 that. Would you have heard about it before you
8 left?
9
MS.
: We're talking about
10 August -.
11
MR.
: 9th.
12
MS.
: I mean I may have. I
13 can't recall.
14
MR.
: Okay. But does it happen
15 before 6:00 a.m. or it happens after 6:00 a.m.
16 normally?
17
MS.
: You mean like inmates
18 that are going to court?
19
MR.
: Going to court or being
20 removed from the prison for whatever reason.
21
MS.
: I mean if it involved
22 me. Say if we had an inmate up on 10 South.
23 Because those inmates up there are generally 3-
24 man holes. So if there was an inmate that I
25 had to physically be involved in escorting,
EFTA00114230
48
1 yes. They would notify me or the activities
2 lieutenant. It just depends.
3
MR.
: No problem. Now I'm going to
4 keep going. Are you familiar with Inmate
5 Jeffrey Epstein?
6
MS.
: Yes.
7
MR.
: Okay. Did you work in the
8 SHU while Epstein was assigned to the SHU?
9
MS.
: No.
10
MR.
: Okay. Do you recall if
11 Epstein had a cellmate?
12
MS.
: At some point he had
13 a cellmate.
14
MR.
: Okay. Were you aware that
15 Epstein had attempted to commit suicide before?
16
MS.
: Yes.
17
MR.
: Okay. Do you recall around
18 what time - what date it was?
19
MS.
: I know it was in
20 July. I can't remember the exact date. But I
21 know it was in July.
22
MR.
: Were you there for that
23 incident?
24
MS.
: Yes.
25
MR.
: Okay. Quickly, do you
EFTA00114231
49
1 remember? Like a short summary what
2 transpired?
3
MS.
: Um, we were called to
4 the special housing unit. I think then we got
5 there and Officer Thomas was working that day.
6 When we got there, the officer informed us that
7 an inmate had tried to hurt himself. So we go
8 up to the cell and it's Epstein.
9
MR.
: Okay.
10
MS.
: And he's lying on the
11 floor seemingly out of it I guess you could
12 say. But when we tap him and we move him, we
13 could see him kind of looking up at us. But
14 then he would close his eyes like he didn't
15 want us to know that he was actually conscious.
16
MR.
: Okay.
17
MS.
: So we couldn't get
18 anything from him. He wouldn't respond to us.
19 But we knew that he was okay. He was
20 breathing. And like I said, he would look up
21 at us from time to time. When he didn't think
22 that we were looking at him.
23
MR.
: Okay.
24
MS.
: And -.
25
MR.
: What happened after that?
EFTA00114232
50
1 Was Epstein placed on suicide watch or psych
2 observation?
3
MS.
: Yes. He was placed
4 on suicide watch.
5
MR.
: Okay.
6
MS.
: Officer Thomas was
7 assigned to watch him. And he literally stood
8 there at his cell all night watching him and
9 talking to him.
10
MR.
: Who was?
11
MS.
: Officer Thomas.
12
MR.
: Okay. Same Thomas?
13
MS.
: Yes.
14
MR.
: Michael Thomas?
15
MS.
: Yes.
16
MR.
: Okay.
17
MS.
: Yes.
18
MR.
: How long - do you recall how
19 long he was on suicide watch?
20
MS.
: I don't recall.
21
MR.
: Okay. No problem. Now was
22 he eventually removed from suicide watch?
23
MS.
: Yes.
24
MR.
: What happened after suicide
25 watch? Was he placed on any of the
EFTA00114233
51
1 observation? Or -?
2
MS.
: I don't remember. I
3 don't remember if he went from suicide watch to
4 psych ops or if he went from suicide watch
5 straight back to the special housing unit.
6
MR.
: So suicide watch - where does
7 that take place?
8
MS.
: That's on the second
9 floor.
10
MR.
: Second floor. What unit?
11
MS.
: Medical.
12
MR.
: Medical?
13
MS.
: It's right out -.
14 It's like an extension to the medical unit
15 slash -. At that time, we had - there was a
16 female housing unit there. So it's adjacent to
17 the female housing unit. But the second floor
18 is our medical floor aside from the housing
19 unit.
20
MR.
: Okay.
21
MS.
: And the psych unit.
22
MR.
: When Epstein was returned
23 back to the SHU. Do you recall any
24 instructions being given by upper management,
25 executive staff, regarding Epstein being
EFTA00114234
52
1 assigned with a ceilmate?
2
MS.
: No.
3
MR.
: Okay. Did you -? I'm going
4 to go through each. Did you receive any
5 instruction from Captain
in regard to
6 this?
7
MS.
: No.
8
MR.
: Okay. Do you recall? I'm
9 going to ask. Do you recall receiving an email
10 from psych instructing that Epstein needed a
11 celimate?
12
MS.
: No.
13
MR.
: I'm going to show you a
14 document. Right? Read that document. Who is
15 that email from?
16
MS.
: This is fro
17
(Phonetic Sp. *00:49:19).
18
MR.
: And who is that?
19
MS.
: She was a
20 psychologist here at the time.
21
MR.
: Okay. And what is the
22 summary of that email?
23
MS.
: It's says inmate
24 Epstein register number 76318-054 is being
25 taken off of psych observation and needs to be
EFTA00114235
53
1 housed with an appropriate cellmate.
2
MR.
: What's the date of that
3 email?
4
MS.
: This is July 30, 2019
5 at 12:30 p.m.
6
MR.
: Do you recall getting that
7 email?
8
MS.
: I don't recall. This
9 is the first I've seen of this email. This is
10 the first time I've seen this email.
11
MR.
: So if you flip through the
12 pages, it actually shows you the recipients.
13 Is your name on that?
14
MS.
: If she sent it to the
15 lieutenants group, I'm sure - more than likely
16 -.
17
MR.
: There's a -.
18
MS.
: Yeah.
19
MR.
It's in alphabetical order.
20
MS.
: Yeah. Yes, I'm here.
21
MR.
Is there a reason why that -?
22 I mean, you don't recall reading that email
23 yourself then.
24
MS.
: I don't even remember
25 seeing this email.
EFTA00114236
54
1
MR.
: Okay. Did you ever
2 participate in executive committee meetings?
3
MS.
: No.
4
MR.
: Okay. That was just the
5 higher ups? You don't even know who -?
6
MS.
: I don't even know
7 what that -.
8
MR.
: Okay. No problem.
9
MS.
: Yeah, I don't -.
10
MR.
: Okay. So I'll move on.
11
MR.
: Initial and date.
12
MR.
: Yeah. Sorry.
Can you
13 initial and date that document for me? I'm
14 going to mention some names. Can you just let
15 me know what, if any, conversations you had
16 with any of these people regarding Epstein and
17 Epstein needing a cellmate at all times?
18 Captain
Lieutenant
19 (Phonetic Sp. *00:51:28).
20
MS.
: Okay. What do you
21 want me to do? I'm sorry.
22
MR.
: No. I'm going to through the
23 names.
24
MS.
: Okay.
25
MR.
: If you recall if you had a
EFTA00114237
55
1 conversation with any of these people in regard
2 to Epstein and Epstein needing a cellmate.
3
MS.
: Okay.
4
MR.
: Okay? This is prior to the
5 incident.
6
MS.
: Okay.
7
MR.
: Captain
8 Lieutenant
. Lieutenant
-
9
10
MR.
: You need to let her say
11 yes or no after each one.
12
MR.
: Okay. Sorry. Apologize.
13 Have you ever had a conversation with
14 Captain
15 cellmate?
16
MS.
- in regard to Epstein needing a
: No.
17
MR.
: What about Lieutenant
18
?
19
MS.
: No.
20
MR.
: Lieutenant
21
MS.
: No.
22
MR.
: Lieutenant
23
MS.
: No.
24
MR.
: Lieutenant
25
MS.
: No.
EFTA00114238
56
1
2
3
4
MR.
:
MS.
MR.
:
MS.
Lieutenant
:
No.
Lieutenant
:
No.
5
MR.
: Now following that I have a
6 few more names. The rest are correctional
7 officers. Same thing. Have you had any
8 conversations with them about Epstein requiring
9 a cellmate? CO
10
MS.
: No.
11
MR.
: CO
12
MS.
: No.
13
MR.
: If I mispronounce the name,
14 please correct me. CO
15
MS.
: No.
16
MR.
: CO Michael Thomas.
17
MS.
:
No.
18
MR.
: CO Tova Noel.
19
MS.
:
No.
20
MR.
CO
:
21
MS.
:
No.
22
MR.
23
MS.
:
No.
24
MR.
: CO
25
MS.
EFTA00114239
57
1
MR.
: Yeah.
2
MS.
: No.
3
MR.
: How about SOS
4
5
MS.
: No.
6
MR.
: Okay. When did you become
7 aware of Inmate Efren Reyes being removed from
8 the MCC? Efren Reyes. Do you know who Efren
9 Reyes is?
10
MS.
11 that is.
12
MR.
: Okay. Do you recall who was
13 Epstein's cellmate?
14
MS.
: When?
: I don't even know who
15
MR.
: During that period? After he
16 came back from suicide watch?
17
MS.
: No.
18
MR.
: Okay.
19
MR.
: Do you remember if he had
20 one after that? We're talking about July 30th
21 when he came back. Are you -?
22
MS.
: I didn't know if he
23 had one or not.
24
MR.
: Okay.
25
MS.
: Um. No. I didn't
EFTA00114240
58
1 know if he had a cellmate or not to be honest
2 with you. No.
3
MR.
: And you're not aware of any
4 requirements of him having a cellmate either?
5
MS.
: I wasn't even aware
6 that they had sent out some information
7 regarding the fact that he needed to have a
8 cellmate. I would think that they would be
9 that that would be something that they would
10 verbalize.
11
MR.
: Okay.
12
MS.
: That they would make
13 sure that we individually -. That they would
14 check to make sure that we all read that
15 message.
16
MR.
: Okay.
17
MS.
: I mean if it was
18 something that was critical -. Because he was
19 on suicide watch. And because of the
20 circumstances that surrounded him. I would
21 expect for them to follow-up and make sure that
22 we all read that email and we were all aware
23 that he was to have a cellie.
24
MR.
: Who would you expect to do
25 that?
EFTA00114241
59
1
MS.
: I would expect for
2 psychology to follow-up with us. I would
3 expect for definitely the captain to get with
4 us individually and tell us.
5
MR.
: Okay.
6
MS.
: Hold a lieutenant's
7 meeting or something to let us know that we
8 were to make sure that he had a cellmate.
9
MR.
: Okay. If - let's say. Have
10 you ever dealt with an inmate that required a
11 cellmate before?
12
MS.
: Not directly, no.
13 No.
14
MR.
: But do you -? Okay. You
15 never have. But if let's say an inmate was
16 required to have a cellmate. And that cellmate
17 was removed for whatever reason. Do you know
18 what the procedure would be?
19
MS.
: If an inmate was
20 required to have a cellmate. And everybody
21 knew. Because when you're talking about an
22 inmate that needs a cellmate, it's not just the
23 lieutenants who work with that inmate. The
24 officers are the ones who are assigned to that
25 inmate housing unit. Around the clock, 24/7.
EFTA00114242
60
1 So you would definitely want that information.
2 That should be an all staff email to be honest
3 with you. Because that way everybody in the
4 institution knows that there's an important
5 reason why that inmate needs a cellmate. And
6 that way if at some point in time it's not
7 happening or there's a lapse in that, everybody
8 knows. So you've got - because you have staff
9 making rounds around the institution on the
10 housing units and all of that stuff all the
11 time. You know, different members of the
12 institution staff. So that would be an all
13 staff email just to alert everybody in the
14 institution that, you know, if you're ever in
15 that area and you come across this inmate and
16 he doesn't have a cellie, then you need to
17 follow-up, ask why, make sure somebody knows
18 that that inmate don't have a cellie.
19
MR.
: I'm going to clarify. Based
20 on the fact that based on what we - our
21 investigation. Inmate Efren Reyes was assigned
22 as a cellmate for Jeffrey Epstein.
23
MS.
: Okay.
24
MR.
: And he was required -
25 according to psychology - he was required to
EFTA00114243
61
1 have a cellmate. Now Inmate Efren Reyes was
2 removed from the MCC on August 9th morning
3 during the day watch. Now based on - I'm going
4 to read you the names again. Right. And you
5 just tell me. You might not know it directly,
6 but who would be responsible to take what
7 action when they found out that Efren Reyes was
8 removed. If there was a requirement, that
9 Epstein had to have a cellmate at all times,
10 and his cellmate was removed, who would be
11 responsible to take action? And I'm going to
12 mention the names. Let me know what their role
13 would have been and what action they should
14 have taken.
15
MS.
: You're telling -.
16 You want me to tell you that. That's if in
17 fact they knew -.
18
MR.
: Yeah. If in fact they knew.
19
MS.
: Yeah. If in fact
20 they knew that he was supposed to have a
21 cellie.
22
MR.
: Yes.
23
MS.
: You know. Not
24 assuming that he had a cellie.
25
MR.
: And so we don't have to
EFTA00114244
62
1 go back and circle back to this. Not only - so
2 if he's naming a name, say what action should
3 have they taken and who should have told them
4 the information with regard to the need to have
5 a cellmate.
6
MS.
: Well I would have to
7 know what position those officers had --
8
MR.
: Sure.
9
MS.
: -- at the time that
10 this occurred also. Because -.
11
MR.
: We can hand you the roster
12 again.
13
MR.
: So this is the August
14 9th. I'll give you that one first.
15
MR.
: But just start with
16 (Indiscernible *00:58:18).
17
MR.
: Again, so he was removed
18 from his cell let's say around 8:30 a.m. and I
19 think he was removed from the institution
20 somewhere around 1:30 p.m. So 8:30 is when he
21 went to a court. And then by 1:30 he was gone.
22
MR.
: They were pretty much
23 notified he's not coming back.
24
MS.
: Mm.
25
MR.
: So I'll start with Captain
EFTA00114245
63
1
2
MS.
: Yes. Captain
3 should have known.
4
MR.
: How would he have known? Who
5 should have made him aware of it?
6
MR.
: Let's just - instead of
7 going through it, let's just first start with
8 going from the bottom up. Who should have
9 known that he was removed? And how should the
10 chain of command have gone up? Looking at that
11 duty schedule roster.
12
MR.
: Yeah. Based on that. Who
13 should have initially known that he was
14 removed?
15
MS.
: Well R&D should have
16 known initially that the inmate was removed.
17 Now whether or not they would have known that
18 he was Epstein's cellie is something different.
19
MR.
: Okay.
20
MS.
: Like I said, if this
21 information had put out because Epstein was a
22 high-profile inmate. He had just attempted
23 suicide. That should have been an all-staff
24 email. That should have alerted everybody.
25 And not only that, but when that happens.
EFTA00114246
64
1 First of all, when Epstein originally arrived
2 to the MCC, Epstein should have been placed on
3 10 South. That's our - what they consider the
4 maximum-security unit here. He never should
5 have been placed on 10 South anyway because
6 you're not guaranteed that anybody in this
7 building is going to maintain a cellie because
8 it's an administrative institution. Inmates
9 come and go all the time. So there's - they
10 don't have a sentence date. And with that
11 said, that means that at any point and time
12 while we're sitting here, the courts can
13 release somebody and that inmate is gone right
14 now. So to put out an email to certain
15 individuals and not make that an all-staff
16 email so that it would -. And I guess we have
17 to back and say what was the intentions of
18 that? If it's something that you feel is
19 concerning and that absolutely needs to happen
20 because you still feel that this inmate is at
21 risk, then you say to yourself, well why is he
22 being released from suicide watch? Or psych
23 ops. Why, you know? If you feel that this
24 inmate still needs this type of supervision.
25 And if the answer to that is yes, he still
EFTA00114247
65
1 needs that type of supervision, then you would
2 recommend that, you know, why don't you keep
3 him?? Why aren't you maintaining him? You
4 know. On watch? If he requires that type of
5 supervision? Or why - since you didn't do it
6 to begin with - which they should have done.
7 Considering he was high-profile, he was an at-
8 risk inmate, just the fact that he was a high-
9 profile inmate, he should have been placed on
10 10 South. After he attempted suicide and they
11 determined that they was going to remove him
12 from that and required him to have a cellie.
13 Then they should have either made it an all-
14 staff email, made sure everybody was aware -
15 everybody. Not just -. And it's difficult
16 because people are on days off, people are on
17 vacation, people are on sick leave, you see
18 what I'm saying?
19
MR.
: Okay.
20
MS.
: So for somebody like
21 Epstein. Epstein should have automatically
22 gone to 10 South where he would have had 24-
23 hour monitoring on him at all times.
24
MR.
: Okay. Assuming that the CO -
25 . Let's start with the COs. Assuming the COs
EFTA00114248
66
1 in the SHU knew that this was a requirement.
2 In day watch. If he was removed at 8:30, who
3 is responsibility would it have been to notify
4 upwards?
5
MS.
: It would have been
6 any of their responsibility if they were there
7 at the time and they were aware that he was
8 being moved or if they knew that he was even
9 supposed to have a cellie.
10
MR.
: So who was the COs on for the
11 SHU?
12
MS.
: On -?
13
MR.
: Day watch for August 9th.
14
MS.
: Day watch on August
15 9th would have been Officer
, Officer
16
, and
17
MR.
: Okay. And what would - if
18 they knew that Epstein was required to have a
19 cellmate, what should they have done?
20
MS.
: If they knew that
21 Epstein required a cellie, and his cellie was
22 released, if they knew he wasn't coming back.
23 I mean I don't know if they knew that when the
24 cellie left that he was never coming back. I
25 don't know what any of these people were told.
EFTA00114249
67
1 So I'm just assuming here. If his cellie was
2 released, and they knew for a fact that he
3 wasn't coming back, and if they knew that he
4 was supposed to have a cellie, which I doubt.
5 Because I didn't even know it. So -.
6
MR.
: Let's just assume they knew.
7 Let's just go from there. If they knew.
8
MS.
: Then one of them
9 should have called.
10
MR.
: Called who?
11
MS.
: The captain,
12 psychology, the lieutenant's office. One of
13 them.
14
MR.
: Okay. And let's just say
15 they called the lieutenant's office. What
16 would the lieutenant's office have done?
17
MS.
: They would have
18 followed up. They would have been like okay,
19 if they didn't know already, they would have
20 determined what's the status of this cellmate.
21 What is -? Is he coming back? They probably
22 would have moved Epstein out of that cell or
23 immediately put another inmate in the cell with
24 him.
25
MR.
: Okay.
EFTA00114250
68
1
MS.
: But when you're
2 talking about somebody like Epstein, you can't
3 just put any inmate in that cell with Epstein.
4 So you know, you kind of have to seek guidance
5 on that and tell - let somebody know what you
6 have going on so they can determine who they
7 want in the cell with Epstein. Which is why it
8 goes back to 10 South. That's why he should
9 have been on 10 South because you can't. He's
10 not one of those inmates that you can just put
11 anybody in his cell with him.
12
MR.
: Who would you have - seek
13 guidance from?
14
MS.
: Me?
15
MR.
: Yeah.
16
MS.
: As a lieutenant?
17
MR.
: To assign - get a new inmate
18 for Epstein. Who do you think? Because you
19 said he's high profile. Who would you have -?
20
MS.
21 the captain --
22
MR.
: Okay.
23
MS.
I would have informed
-- that you know the
24 cellie that he had had been released and asked
25 him you know how do you want us to move
EFTA00114251
69
1 forward?
2
MR.
: Okay.
3
MS.
: Who do you want the
4 SHU officers to place in that cell with him?
5
MR.
: So as per whoever the CO is
6 they should report it to the lieutenant or the
7 captain and they would have brought it up and
8 someone higher up should have assigned a
9 cellmate.
10
11
12
13
14 that he was supposed to have had a cellmate and
15 based upon that email that I just saw for the
16 first time, I'm sure they didn't - in this
17 group here. Or they would have contacted
18 somebody.
19
MR.
: Okay.
20
MS.
: These guys definitely
21 were not you know
22
, these cats - they wouldn't have ignored
23 that. They would have told somebody.
If they
24 knew they would have definitely reported it to
25 somebody. And um -.
MS.
knew.
MR.
: Yeah.
: The officers if they
MS.
: If they were aware
EFTA00114252
70
1
MR.
: How soon should have an
2 inmate been assigned to that cell? Normally,
3 what's the procedure? How soon after would
4 they -?
5
MS.
: I say that Epstein
6 should have been on 10 South.
7
MR.
: Okay.
8
MS.
: So I mean, as quick
9 as possible.
10
MR.
: Okay. That's it.
11
MS.
: Yeah. As quick as
12 possible.
13
MR.
: I'm not going to go through
14 names. You just explained this from the bottom
15 up. We just wanted to clarify.
16
MS.
: Okay.
17
MR.
: I'm going to move on. Did
18 you conduct on August 9th evening from 10:00
19 p.m. to August 10th the next day? Did you
20 conduct any rounds in the SHU during your
21 shift?
22
MS.
: Yes.
23
MR.
: What round did you do. Do
24 you recall? What count or rounds did you do in
25 the SHU?
EFTA00114253
71
1
MS.
: I don't remember what
2 rounds.
3
MR.
: Okay.
4
MS.
: I think it was
5 probably mid-morning I think. What do you mean
6 by rounds? Do you mean did I conduct my
7 lieutenant rounds?
8
MR.
: Yeah. Lieutenant rounds.
9
MS.
: Yeah. Yeah.
10
MR.
: Mid-morning?
11
MS.
: I think it was mid-
12 morning because there was a lot going on that
13 night.
14
MR.
: No problem.
15
MS.
: So I was running
16 behind.
17
MR.
: Let's clarify this
18 because you weren't there mid-morning.
19
MR.
: Mid-morning you mean
20 overnight.
21
MS.
: Yes. Overnight.
22
MR.
: Okay. So when you say
23 mid you mean like 4:00 a.m. on August 10th is
24 what you're saying?
25
MS.
: Yeah. Probably.
EFTA00114254
72
1 That sounds about right.
2
MR.
: Okay.
3
MR.
: Now I just have two
4 questions. Why do COs have to conduct rounds?
5
MS.
: To make sure that the
6 inmates are safe. That they're still
7 breathing. That there is nothing illegal or
8 unauthorized going on inside the institution.
9 Just to make sure that everything is okay.
10
MR.
: Okay. Is it -? Why do COs
11 have to conduct counts?
12
MS.
: To account for all
13 the inmates.
14
MR.
: Okay. Is it mandatory to
15 conduct counts and rounds?
16
MS.
: It's part of your
17 duties.
18
MR.
: Okay. Is it policy?
19
MS.
: Yes, it's policy.
20
MR.
: Okay. And you explained in
21 your previous interview about who is
22 responsible for conducting the rounds. As a
23 supervisor, you mentioned in your previous
24 interview that the supervisor should also
25 conduct one round per -. One count or one
EFTA00114255
73
1 round? I mean what are they -?
2
MS.
: Each lieutenant is
3 required to make rounds during their shift.
4 Whether that be the operations lieutenant or
5 whether that be the activities lieutenant.
6 Just a lieutenant. It doesn't have to be both.
7 If I'm operations lieutenant and I have an
8 activities lieutenant assigned, both of us
9 don't have to make rounds. The lieutenant - a
10 lieutenant just have to make rounds during each
11 respective shift.
12
MR.
: Is there specific units that
13 they have to go to or can it be anything?
14
MS.
: I mean if you're
15 making rounds, the idea is to go to each
16 housing unit.
17
MR.
: Okay.
18
MS.
: Now depending on what
19 you have going on during the night, sometimes
20 you may get that done. Sometimes you don't. I
21 mean there may be a lot going on at the
22 institution that you may not get around to
23 making the rounds done during your shift.
24
MR.
: Okay. I want to take a quick
25 detour. I'm going to show you two documents.
EFTA00114256
74
1 Can you show me what that is a map of?
2
MS.
: I have no idea.
3
MR.
: If you don't understand it --
4
MS.
: Yeah, I don't --
5
MR.
then just say it.
6
MS.
: -- know what this is.
7
MR.
: Okay. No problem. How many
8 tiers are there for the SHU?
9
MS.
: I haven't been up
10 there in a while. I'm going to say there is
11 two. There's four tiers. I mean if you're
12 talking about upstairs and downstairs, there's
13 two tiers.
14
MR.
: Two tiers.
15
MS.
: Mm-hmm. And then you
16 have 10 South. And then you have Lower 10
17 South. So. If you count each individual tier,
18 I guess you would say five tiers. Because you
19 got Lower 10 South up there as well.
20
MR.
: Okay. Five tiers.
21
MS.
: Mm-hmm.
22
MS.
: Thank you. I'm going
23 to move on. I'm going to show you a document.
24 Can you tell me what that is?
25
MS.
: This is the E-1.
EFTA00114257
75
1
MR.
: What's an E-1?
2
MS.
: The E-1 is a
3 computation of all the housing units. Well it
4 includes all the housing units and how many
5 inmates they have on their unit at the time in
6 which this is actually printed.
7
MR.
: What time is that for?
8
MS.
: It says August 10,
9 2019 at 12:35 --
10
MR.
: 12:35. And can you -?
11
MS.
: -- a.m.
12
MR.
: Can you find the count for
13 the SHU in there? You can flip through it.
14 You can -.
15
MS.
: Yeah. It's -.
16
MR.
: What units are they reflected
17 by? What do they call the units on the
18 document? Are they referred to as the SHU? Or
19 are they referred to by a different name?
20
MS.
: They're referred to
21 by alphabets.
22
MR.
: What alphabets?
23
MS.
: For special housing
24 unit, it would be ZA. And their count is - at
25 this time - on August 10, 2019 at 0035, it was
EFTA00114258
76
1 72.
2
MR.
: If you flip through it, it
3 will tell you there might be more documents.
4 Keep going. It'll tell you who did the counts.
5 Do you recall who -? Based on the document,
6 can you tell me who did the count for the SHU?
7 Which SHU unit - ZA or ZB - was Epstein housed
8 in?
9
MS.
: Epstein was in ZA.
10
MR.
: ZA. And who did the count at
11 midnight?
12
MS.
: There was an issue
13 with the count at midnight.
14
MR.
: What was the issue?
15
MS.
: There was an inmate
16 that they had removed from the unit and he was
17 on - he was being housed in the receiving and
18 discharge in one of the holding cells in R&D on
19 the third floor. And -.
20
MR.
: Do you recall if that was
21 Inmate Fernandez?
22
MS.
: I don't know what.
23
MR.
: Okay.
24
MS.
: I don't remember what
25 his name was.
EFTA00114259
77
1
MR.
: Okay.
2
MS.
: But they were for
3 some reason
I want to say. I don't know if
4 he was on dry cell or what his status was.
5
MR.
: Was -?
6
MS.
: I don't think he was
7 on suicide watch. I can't remember.
8
MR.
: You said dry cell. Now dry
9 cell. Is that in R&D?
10
MS.
: No. That's not in
11 R&D. Usually dry cell is done in the special
12 housing unit. So I can't remember what his
13 status was but he was
I can't remember if
14 he was on dry cell or if he was on - if that
15 was an extension of the suicide watch. I can't
16 remember, but there was an inmate down there.
17 And he was being housed down there with the
18 watch on that particular night. And they were
19 counting him on the unit because they hadn't
20 received any guidance as to how he was going to
21 be counted. Because R&D, mind you, is the
22 intake unit. It's not a housing unit.
23
MR.
: Okay.
24
MS.
: So inmates are
25 theoretically are not supposed to be staying -
EFTA00114260
78
1 spending the night down there.
2
MR.
: So R&D. So they do mainly
3 intake you said. Right?
4
MS.
: That's what they do.
5 Yeah.
6
MR.
: If they move an inmate to R&D
7 what would it be for? Are they leaving the
8 (Indiscernible *01:14:14)?
9
MS.
: Yeah because they're
10 leaving or they're going to court or something
11 like that.
12
MR.
: On that sheet, what would you
13 identify the area - the unit - as for R&D on
14 there?
15
MS.
: RA.
16
MR.
: RA?
17
MS.
: Yes.
18
MR.
: Okay. Now based on that, you
19 said there was an issue with it.
20
MS.
: Right. Because if
21 you have an inmate in RA, then it's going to
22 interfere with the special housing unit count.
23 If this inmate that's here on RA is from
24 special housing. Okay.
25
MR.
: Yeah.
EFTA00114261
79
1
MS.
: When this - um.
2 Their count was originally 73. But then you
3 have an inmate in RA from special housing.
4
MR.
: Okay.
5
MS.
: So that would bring
6 it down to 72 because this inmate -. This is
7 an outcount. You do an outcount when an inmate
8 is in a different area than where he is housed.
9 Okay.
10
MR.
: Okay.
11
MS.
: And you can't have 73
12 inmates. If 73 is your base, if you've got an
13 inmate from that area on outcount, then that's
14 not a good count.
15
MR.
: Right. So the count. So
16 let's get it right. According to the records,
17 how many inmates should have been at the 12:00
18 p.m. count. How many inmates should have been
19 in the SHU?
20
MR.
: 12:00 a.m.
21
MR.
: 12:00 a.m. Sorry.
22
MS.
: Well that depends
23 because when they initially did this, that's
24 how they was counting the inmates. It wasn't
25 until I started doing that count that I
EFTA00114262
80
1 realized that something wasn't right. So
2 that's how we got around to there's an inmate
3 in R&D. You know that's being housed down
4 there on watch. You know. That's how we got to
5 that. So it's like oh, so there's an inmate in
6 R&D. You know. And then you start asking
7 questions. Why is he there? What's the deal
8 with him? Because none of this information was
9 passed down.
10
MR.
: Okay.
11
MS.
: So I've got to ask
12 the staff what's going on.
13
MR.
: I'm going to clarify. I'm
14 going to go back. My question is at midnight,
15 who did the count for the SHU?
16
MS.
: According to this, it
17 says Thomas and Noel.
18
MR.
: Alright. If they did the
19 count and how many people are supposed to do
20 the count?
21
MS.
: Two. At least two.
22
MR.
: Two. If they went through
23 the SHU and they did a head count, right. How
24 many people should they have down?
25
MS.
: They should have
EFTA00114263
81
1 gotten 72. But what I'm telling you is when
2 this count was done, they were counting this
3 inmate that was in R&D on that count because no
4 one had told them that the inmate was actually
5 somewhere else. And he was being counted in
6 that area. So they were logging -. So what I
7 understand - and that's how they understood it.
8 That that inmate was being carried on to their
9 count.
10
MR.
: Even though they didn't get
11 eyes on the inmate? Even though they don't
12 know physically. If they physically cannot see
13 the inmate, they're allowed to put it in their
14 count?
15
MS.
: Because the inmate is
16 being ghosted. They could call R&D and ask and
17 say he is the inmate there. Because there was
18 a staff member on the inmate. The problem was
19 not how many inmates they had or what's
20 counted. The problem was the status of this
21 inmate that was in R&D.
22
MR.
: Okay.
23
MS.
: They didn't' know the
24 status of the inmate in R&D whether he was
25 going to be -. Whether he was staying there
EFTA00114264
82
1 altogether or how they were supposed to
2 indicate him on their count slip. They didn't
3 know any of that. That wasn't until they
4 brought this to my attention. And this was the
5 original count slip. There was another count
6 slip that they supposed to have been
7 completing. And place that in the Sally port,
8 but apparently nobody picked it up. So this
9 was the original count slip that was submitted.
10
MR.
: Okay.
11
MS.
: But they were
12 supposed to -. Once we corrected this issue,
13 with the dude in - with the guy in R&D and put
14 him on an outcount. And place him in R&D, then
15 they were supposed to go back, recount. They
16 were supposed to recount and then they was to
17 submit another count slip.
18
MR.
: Okay. That's what I'm
19 getting to.
20
MS.
: Yes.
21
MR.
: So who found out that there
22 was an error with the count? Did they notify
23 you or did you found -?
24
MS.
: Right. Right. When
25 they called. I think we kind of hashed it out
EFTA00114265
83
1 together.
2
MR.
: Okay.
3
MS.
: You know because they
4 were saying that they had an inmate that was
5 not on the unit. And they was like well what
6 do we do?
7
MR.
: Okay.
8
MS.
: Because I guess -. I
9 don't know what had happened, but they knew
10 that the guy wasn't on the unit. So they was
11 trying to get it corrected.
12
MR.
: Okay.
13
MS.
: And of course we
14 started asking questions. Where is this inmate
15 at? What is he doing there? How long he's
16 been there. Dah-dah-dah-dah. But again, this
17 is count time. So you've just got to do the
18 best you can because we've got a count to
19 clear. You know.
20
MR.
: Do you recall. Sorry. You
21 had a question.
22
MR.
: I just want to make sure
23 that we're clear. So did they call in 73
24 without saying this is 73 with a guy that's not
25 actually here. Or did they just call in 73 and
EFTA00114266
84
1
2
3
4
someone said how is this 73 if you guys only
have 72?
MS.
: They called saying
that their count was you know that they had the
5 count issue was 73. But they had an inmate
6 that had been removed that had been taken off
7 the unit and was taken to R&D.
8
MR.
: Okay. So they knew that
9 when they called in the count? It wasn't like
10 --
11
MS.
: I mean --
12
MR.
: -- they said --
13
14
MS.
calling -.
: -- they weren't
15
MR.
: -- hey we've got 73 and -
16 -
17
MS.
: No-no-no-no-no.
18
19
MR.
:
you have 73 for --
-- someone said how do
20
MS.
: No.
21
22
MR.
:
there?
-- someone that's not
23
MS.
: No-no-no-no-no. When
24 they called in the count, they was like I have
25 73 but one of the inmates up here is in R&D.
EFTA00114267
85
1
MR.
: So they knew that there
2 was only 72 in SHU at the time. They made note
3 of the fact
4
MS.
: Right because -.
5
MR.
:
I'm calling in 73
6 because that's what our numbers are supposed to
7 be, but one guy is not here.
8
MS.
: And they didn't know
9 the status of that inmate.
10
MR.
: Sure.
11
MS.
: They didn't know -.
12
MR.
: So it wasn't like after-
13 the-fact. Like somebody like you're saying -.
14
MS.
: Like I caught them?
15
MR.
: Yeah. Like wait, how are
16 you calling 73 --
17
MS.
: No.
18
MR.
if one guy's not here.
19
MS.
: No. No-no-no-no-no.
20 They -.
21
MR.
: So they brought it to
22 your guys' attention rather than the other way
23 around?
24
MS.
: And I said so how
25 many bodies do you have on the unit? And he
EFTA00114268
86
1 said I have 72.
2
MR.
: So that's a good answer.
3 So he - so Thomas is the one who called that
4 count? Rather than Noel?
5
MS.
: I think it was
6 Thomas. I don't think I spoke to Noel about
7 the count.
8
MR.
: So you don't remember
9 specifically though. But you --
10
MS.
: I think it was
11 Thomas.
12
MR.
: -- believe it was Thomas.
13
MS.
: It was a guy.
14
MR.
: Okay.
15
MS.
: And I said well how
16 many inmates do you have on your unit right
17 now? How many bodies? And he said 72. And I
18 said well let me call because I need to call
19 and make sure that this other body is where
20 it's supposed to be. I need to see this body.
21 I need to make sure somebody -. I need to know
22 what's going on with this body. Is a person
23 sitting on it? Is this guy somewhere in a room
24 by himself?
25
MR.
: Okay. And you
EFTA00114269
87
1 specifically recall that?
2
MS.
: I told - and I said
3 go back. Go back around. Do another count.
4 And then send me a new count slip.
5
MR.
: That says 72 versus 73?
6
MS.
: That says 72. Yes.
7
MR.
: So you instructed them to do
8 a recount.
9
MS.
: Right.
10
MR.
: Do you know if they did the
11 recount?
12
MS.
: I don't know if they
13 did a recount because like I said --
14
MR.
: Okay.
15
MS.
:
I was in the
16 process. I had to continue with the count. I
17 had to verify and get some information
18 regarding this inmate in R&D. But I have no
19 reason to disbelieve that they didn't do the
20 count.
21
MR.
: Now what if they -? If
22 they already knew there was 72 and one guy,
23 would they be required to actually do a new
24 count? Or just fill out a new count slip?
25
MS.
: I told them to do a
EFTA00114270
88
1 new count. Just to make sure.
2
MR.
: So you told them to
3 actually do a new count?
4
MS.
: Yeah. I told them to
5 do a new count.
6
MR.
: And they were
7 instructions you provided to Thomas - or a
8 male. You don't know specifically if it was a
9 males voice?
10
MS.
: Right.
11
MR.
: Okay.
12
MS.
: Right. But yeah, I
13 said, you know, what did you all count. He
14 said we counted 72. And I was like well you
15 know, count again. And then send me - redo
16 your count slip and just send me another count
17 slip. Because I'm going to - while I verify
18 this other information.
19
MR.
: Okay. And the fact that
20 there's only the two people in the SHU - Thomas
21 and Noel - you believe it to have been Thomas.
22
MS.
: Right.
23
MR.
: Okay.
24
MS.
: And to be honest with
25 you, I'm giving myself some time so that I can
EFTA00114271
89
1 figure out whether or not -. I want to know
2 whether or not this guy is actually in SHU.
3
MR.
: Sure.
4
MS.
: Or um, in R&D. So
5 I'm like you know just count again and make
6 sure just in case. I'm saying to myself. I'm
7 not saying this to him. I'm thinking to
8 myself, just in case, I called. And there's
9 nobody down there. I wanted to make sure that
10 this is actually the count.
11
MR.
: Sure.
12
MS.
: There.
13
MR.
: And I want to make sure
14 so that something else is clear. When you as a
15 lieutenant are conducting rounds, that you're
16 required once per shift, that's rounds for
17 employees. Not conducting rounds with the COs
18 for inmates. So is your round to go around to
19 your employees to make sure? That's your
20 round? As opposed to participating in a count
21 or a round with the COs conducting of inmates?
22 Do you follow
23
MS.
: We're not -.
24
MR.
: -- what I'm asking?
25
MS.
: We are not required
EFTA00114272
90
1 to go to each individual cell and look at the
2 inmates. When we make rounds, we get with the
3 officers. We make sure that -. I mean if we
4 choose to do that we can. But -.
5
MR.
: But there's no
6 requirement. For your requirement, that one
7 per shift of round. That's to do rounds with
8 your officer - or with your staff - as opposed
9 to conducting a round with them.
10
MS.
: No. There was
11 nothing here said to us or in policy telling us
12 that we needed to go around --
13
MR.
: Sure.
14
MS.
: -- on each housing
15 unit to each individual cell and check on the
16 inmates. If we chose to do that based upon
17 something that we knew wasn't right or
18 something that we had heard or something like
19 that during the course of our shift. Then that
20 - and we felt as though we needed to double
21 check on it. Because our officers are our eyes
22 and ears. And during that time, we didn't'
23 have a whole lot of time. We would spend half
24 of our shift just trying to fill overtime. At
25 that time.
EFTA00114273
91
1
MR.
: So are you supposed to
2 though? So if they do a count, are you
3 supposed to do a count with them during your
4 shift?
5
MS.
: I can't remember at
6 that time if we were required to do at least
7 one count because one count per shift is what
8 we're required to do as a lieutenant.
9
MR.
: One count with inmates?
10
MS.
: No. One count in the
11 control center.
12
MR.
: Okay. So you -. You're
13 not putting
You're never putting your eyes
14 on the inmates doing a count with -. For
15 instance, in this case, if Noel and Thomas are
16 in the SHU, they're doing a 12:00 a.m. count, a
17 3:00 a.m. count, and a 5:00 a.m. count. Are
18 you doing any counts with them?
19
MS.
: No I'm not doing any.
20
MR.
: Okay.
21
MS.
: I'm not - and it
22 wouldn't be for just SHU. It would be for any
23 housing unit.
24
MR.
: Sure.
25
MS.
: Period. But -.
EFTA00114274
92
1
MR.
: But for this instance,
2 specifically, I'm talking about the 12:00 a.m.
3 count, a 3:00 a.m. count, and a 5:00 a.m.
4 count. Is there any requirement for any
5 lieutenants that are in that you have oversight
6 over the SHU to do a count with them?
7
MS.
: No.
8
MR.
: No.
9
MS.
: No.
10
MR.
: And there wasn't at that
11 time?
12
MS.
: No.
13
MR.
: And you hadn't done one
14 at that time with them?
15
MS.
: No.
16
MR.
: So your requirements are
17 geared toward staff members not toward inmates?
18
MS.
: Our -.
19
MR.
: Because you're an officer
20 -. You're responsible for the staff. The
21 staff are responsible for the inmates.
22 Correct?
23
MS.
: As a lieutenant, we
24 are required to do one count per shift in the
25 control center. We're required to take one
EFTA00114275
93
1 count.
2
MR.
: Sure. And this is the
3 one you did. You did the 12:00 a.m.?
4
MS.
: This is the one count
5
6
MR.
: And this is why you
7 reviewed it and said, I've got the get this
8 thing right.
9
MS.
: Well during the
10 course of taking this count, that came up.
11
MR.
: Okay.
12
MS.
: And of course we had
13 to address it because we can't house the count
14 saying one thing in some area and it's not
15 adding up. I can't have an
16
MR.
: So are they --
17
MS.
: -- inmate -.
18
MR.
: -- calling you that day
19 then. So Thomas is calling you and providing
20 your count and that's the count that you did?
21
MS.
: That's the
I was
22 taking this count
23
MR.
: So he didn't call control
24 - or he called control, but you were the person
25 he spoke with.
EFTA00114276
94
1
MS.
: Right.
2
MR.
Gotcha.
3
MS.
: Right. Right.
4
MR.
: Do you recall that night, did
5 you participate in the 10:00 p.m. count?
6
MS.
: Did I do what?
7
MR.
: Did you participate - were
8 you there when the 10:00 p.m. count happened?
9
MS.
: No. Hm-mm.
10
MR.
: So you came on shift after?
11
MS.
: I don't know if I
12 probably was here doing --
13
MR.
: But not participating.
14
MS.
: -- the 10:00 p.m.
15 count. Yeah. But I didn't take the 10:00 p.m.
16 count.
17
MR.
: Question. Do you know when
18 that inmate was removed to R&D? What time?
19
MS.
: I have no idea. I
20 have no idea. That was done prior to me
21 getting there.
22
MR.
: Now let's say the inmate was
23 removed prior to the 10:00 p.m. count. Would
24 the 10:00 p.m. count have been wrong? If they
25 reported?
EFTA00114277
95
1
MS.
: I have no - I can't
2 answer that. I don't know.
3
MR.
: No-no. But you fixed it.
4 They called you, they asked for the -. Let me
5 show you the 10 - two more documents. Let's do
6 -. Take a look at this document. What is
7 that?
8
MS.
: This is the E-1 for
9 August 9, 2019 at 9:33.
10
MS.
: Okay. And what's the
11 count for the SHU at that point?
12
MS.
: It's 73.
13
MR.
: 73?
14
MS.
: Mm-hmm.
15
MR.
: And what's the count for RA?
16 RA being the R&D?
17
MS.
: It's saying zero.
18
MR.
: Okay. If the inmate was
19 moved prior to this count, to R&D, would
20 technically the count for the SHU have been
21 wrong?
22
MS.
: That depends on what
23 the officers were told because like I said, RA
24 is not a housing unit. So no officer would
25 have been moving an inmate to RA on their own.
EFTA00114278
96
1 Something -.
2
MR.
: Okay.
3
MS.
: There had to have
4 been some guidance that - whereby they was told
5 because this inmate was there all night with a
6 watch on him.
7
MR.
: Which inmate? The one in
8 R&D?
9
MS.
: The inmate that was
10 taken to --
11
MR.
: R&D?
12
MS.
: R&D. Yes. The
13 inmate had a watch. There was a staff member
14 on the inmate. You can't --
15
MR.
: What was the watch for?
16
MS.
: -- just put an inmate
17 in R&D and just leave him there. There's
18 nobody to watch him. R&D staff leaves at
19 10:00. So you can't just leave an inmate there
20 with nobody watching him.
21
MR.
: So
Maybe I'm saying this
22 wrong. I'm just trying to get clarification.
23 When you do - when a CO does a count - can they
24 account - but in the count - can they account
25 for an inmate that they do not get their eyes
EFTA00114279
97
1 on?
2
MS.
: Depending on who gave
3 them the instruction as to how that inmate was
4 going to be accounted for.
5
MR.
: What about?
6
MS.
: If that - say - if
7 that. If that inmate was in R&D at the 10:00
8 count, depending on how they were guided
9 because I mean they know that an inmate can't
10 be in R&D by himself either. So depending on
11 how that inmate was being counted, they may
12 have been given instructions by somebody to
13 ghost him. And count him in SHU. I don't
14 know. I can't explain that.
15
MR.
: So COs have the ability it's
16 not per policy, COs have the ability to do
17 that?
18
MR.
: To do what?
19
MR.
: If they don't have eyes on,
20 if they can get instructions from another
21 person saying no, report it as your count?
22
MS.
: That would have to be
23 someone in their chain of command that would
24 advise them to do that.
25
MR.
: Who? Do you know?
EFTA00114280
98
1
MS.
: It would be someone
2 over the lieutenant's head because no
3 lieutenant is going to - that I knew at the
4 time - that I worked with at the time - would
5 have an inmate in a different area knowing that
6 inmate was not going to be coming back to that
7 housing unit.
8
MR.
: So the key right now is we
9 don't know when the inmate was moved. Right?
10
MS.
: I don't know when. I
11 can't tell you when the inmate was moved. This
12 happened before I got there. What specific
13 time he was moved, I don't know.
14
MR.
: Let's say the inmate was
15 moved and they didn't' get the authorization
16 from the captain. Would the account have been
17 wrong?
18
MS.
: I don't -. You know
19 as far as I know, it could have been someone
20 above the captain. I don't know. I can't
21 provide you with an adequate answer because --
22
MR.
: No problem.
23
MS.
:
I don't
24
MR.
: We're going to go past that.
25
MS.
: Okay.
EFTA00114281
99
1
MR.
: So I'm going to show you.
2 This is just for clarification purposes, just
3 for our records. I'm going to show you one
4 more document. What is F?
5
MS.
: This is an E-1 for
6 August 9, 2019. The time is1541.
7
MR.
: Okay. And that should be the
8 4:00 p.m. count?
9
MS.
: Yes. This would have
10 been for the 4:00 count.
11
MR.
: What is the lineup on top?
12 It says A-T-T-Y. What is that?
13
MS.
: What?
14
MR.
: Up here. Up here it says A-
15 T-T-Y.
16
MS.
: Oh, that's attorney
17 conference.
18
MR.
: Okay. And what is outcount?
19 On - towards the right. Over here.
20
MS.
: Well....
21
MR.
: This one right here.
22
MS.
: The outcount is the
23
This is for that section that you're
24 pointing to. That would be the number of
25 inmates that axe not in their respective
EFTA00114282
100
1 housing units from these areas - the different
2 areas that are designated here.
3
MR.
: Is it possibly because
4 they're leaving?
5
MS.
: From the different
6 housing -. I have -. It could be a number of
7 things.
8
MR.
: Okay. At 4:00 p.m. what was
9 the count in the SHU?
10
MS.
: Um, 75.
11
MR.
: 75?
12
MS.
: Yes.
13
MR.
: Okay. And what is the count
14 for RA?
15
MS.
: Zero.
16
MR.
: Okay. So that's R&D.
17 There's nobody there. Where is - according to
18 that if you flip through it. Where is Epstein
19 at that point?
20
MS.
: It looks like he's in
21 attorney conference.
22
MR.
: Okay. No problem. We're
23 going to keep going.
24
MS.
: Okay.
25
MR.
: Um.... On August 10th.
EFTA00114283
101
1
2
3
4
Right. When did you go to the SHU?
MS.
: Like I said earlier,
I think it was
MR.
: Can you do me a favor? Can
5 you sign it and date it just like before?
6
MR.
: Initial and date on the
7 top.
8
MR.
: Initial.
9
MS.
: Which one?
10
MR.
: All of them.
11
MR.
: Oh. Since I showed you.
12
MS.
: Okay.
13
MR.
: I'll take that. When did you
14 -? Did you make a round into the SHU on August
15 10th?
16
MS.
: Yes.
17
MR.
: What time?
18
MS.
: I don't remember what
19 time. It was like halfway between my shift
20 later on in the morning.
21
MR.
: Did you speak to -?
22
MS.
: Probably about 4:--
23 something. Between 4:00 and 5:00 I guess.
24
MR.
: Do you recall who the COs
25 were on duty?
EFTA00114284
102
1
MS.
: Yes. Thomas and
2 Noel.
3
MR.
: Okay. Did you speak to them?
4
MS.
: Yes.
5
MR.
: Okay. And everything was
6 good? Did they say have any complaints or
7 anything like that?
8
MS.
: No. They were fine.
9
MR.
: Do you recall your
10 conversation at all?
11
MS.
: I don't recall my
12 conversation with them, but I spoke to them for
13 a minute because I stopped there. I went up to
14 10 South and I made my rounds up there. And I
15 came back and I spoke with them again before I
16 left.
17
MR.
: So you spoke with them
18 twice?
19
MS.
: Yeah. I spoke with
20 them initially. And I told them you know when
21 I get back out -. I'm going to run up to 10
22 South and make my rounds and sign my books and
23 stuff up there. And then I'll get back with
24 you guys. I'll come back on my way down.
25 Because I needed to sign their round sheets.
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1
MR.
: Okay.
2
MR.
: Now you mentioned that you
3 don't know - you never heard of the requirement
4 for Epstein needing a cellmate. Right?
5
MS.
: Right.
6
MR.
: So you didn't know.
7 According to what you said before, you didn't
8 even know the COs knew that requirement.
9
MS.
: If I didn't know, I
10 know they didn't know. And according to that
11 because I don't even see
Where is that
12 email? Because I want to see who did they
13 actually send that to. If it says on the email
14 who they sent that to.
15
MR.
: It looks like they sent
16 it up to all the officers, lieutenants and.
17
MS.
: This says suicide
18 watch/psych observation update.
19
MR.
: So on or around July
20 30th, Epstein came off of the suicide
21 observation and was placed back into the SHU.
22 And this was supposed to be the email saying
23 that he was required to have a cellmate while
24 he was in the SHU.
25
MS.
: Yeah, but this isn't
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1 MYM all.
2
MR.
: Right. So you said you
3 think it should have gone to all staff.
4
MS.
: Yeah-yeah.
5
MR.
: So I guess what I'm
6
MS.
: This is only
7 addressed to suicide - whoever is in that
8 group. It looks like a group that they made
9 up. Because I never heard of that group
10 before. Suicide watch/psych -.
11
MR.
12 them?
13
MR.
14
MS.
You never got the email from
: Sure. So -.
: Slash psych
15 observation update. I guess that's a group.
16
MR.
: So these are the -. So
17 the one - pages one through three. These are
18 the people that they I guess placed in that --
19
MS.
: That they placed in
20 that group.
21
MR. -:
group. And it looks
22 like it's all the lieutenants and the officers
23 in the institution as opposed to the COs
24 themselves.
25
MS.
: You mean specific
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1 officers? Specific staff? Because I can
2 assure you that's not all of them.
3
MR.
: That's not all of them.
4 Yeah. So I don't know how they actually chose
5 it. But you said you know you were on it but
6 you don't recall receiving it.
7
MS.
8 receiving that.
9
MR.
: I do not recall
: Now do you know -? I
10 don't know how it works here. I mean are you
11 in front of your computer? Do you read your
12 emails? How is that?
13
MS.
: During that time, I
14 will be honest with you. I didn't have time to
15 read any emails because in addition to not
16 having a lot of staff, we had a bunch of
17 incidents that were going on during that time
18 as well.
19
MR.
: Okay.
20
MS.
: A bunch of body
21 alarms and stuff like that that was going on.
22 And because of the fact that we were so short-
23 handed, you didn't have time to read emails and
24 stuff at the time. You just had too much to do
25 with the time in your shift. It was just way
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1 too much.
2
MR.
: Sure.
3
MS.
: It was way too much.
4
MR.
: So although this was sent
5 to you, you don't think you probably even
6 clicked on it?
7
MS.
: I got a lot of emails
8 during that time that I can assure you I didn't
9 read.
10
MR.
: Sure. Alright. So you
11 were unaware. How does it work -? Just can
12 you walk me through specifically on you know if
13 Reyes the cellie. Did you know that Epstein
14 had a ceilmate?
15
MS.
: I didn't know Epstein
16 had a ceilmate.
17
MR.
: So you didn't even know
18 he had a cellmate at all?
19
MS.
: I didn't know if he
20 had a cellmate or not.
21
MR.
: Okay.
22
MS.
: When all of this
23 happened, it of course later came out that he
24 had a cellmate and the inmate was removed. But
25 as far as me having personal knowledge of
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1 whether or not he had a cellmate, I didn't know
2 if he had a cellmate or not. I assumed he had
3 a cellmate.
4
MR.
: Now being that you know
5 they sent this email. You said who should have
6 advised you at least at some point, hey he
7 needs a cellmate. Where was the communication
8 breakdown there?
9
MS.
: It wasn't just me.
10 It should have been everybody.
11
MR.
: Sure. So what my question
12 is though, who is responsible for that?
13
MS.
: The - you would think
14 that psychology would have called us or
15 somebody should have been making sure.
16
MR.
: Okay. So let's go
17 through that. From psychology, who should
18 who dropped the ball here?
19
MS.
: Well I'm not going to
20 say anybody dropped the ball because it's all
21 about responsibilities to -.
22
MR.
: But somebody - psychology
23 I guess made the note. So is it the person
24 that's on the email, this
25 (Phonetic Sp. *01:39:47) Should have she gone
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1 around and aside from sending this email should
2 have she spoken to people or had a meeting?
3 What should have happened?
4
MS.
: I mean if that's what
5 she -. I just feel as though they that - to
6 communicate
Like I said originally. My
7 whole thing was Epstein should have been placed
8 on 10 South to begin with because he was that
9 type of inmate that checked all the boxes for -
10 -
11
MR.
: Sure.
12
MS.
: -- someone that
13 should have been placed on 10 South.
14
MR.
: And that's going to be
15 one of my follow-up questions is what the
16 difference between the SHU and 10 South. But
17 specifically to this, like what should have
18 psychology done differently?
19
MS.
: I would have made
20 sure - I just would have -. I just would have
21 made sure that everybody -. I never even would
22 have sent Epstein back to -. I would have
23 never even put him back in that position again.
24
MR.
: So if he had -.
25
MS.
: If he had a cellmate
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1 because even saying that he had a cellmate.
2 Even telling somebody that he should have had a
3 cellmate. Still wouldn't have prevented him
4 from trying to harm himself. We had just went
5 through that.
6
MR.
: Sure.
7
MS.
: We - that was a
8 scenario when they got him. That got to the
9 memo being done.
10
MR.
: Okay. So -.
11
MS.
: You know? He had a
12 cellmate then.
13
MR.
: The other lieutenants
14 though in this case, they knew that he was
15 required to have a cellmate. Correct?
16 According to --
17
MR.
: Yes.
18
MR.
: -- there? So it sounds -
19
From reviewing the other interviews, it
20 looks like you were the one that didn't know.
21 everyone else knew. Do you know why that would
22 have been? Who should have made sure you knew
23 that he needed a cellmate?
24
MS.
: I would think whoever
25 knew that he needed an inmate.
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1
MR.
: So that's what I'm
2 saying. Everyone else know. So like all the
3 other lieutenants and the captain. They all
4 said that they were aware that he was required
5 to have a cellmate. So the question
So I
6 don't know if they got the information from the
7 email, if there was an all-hands. Who should
8 have made sure that you knew that he had a
9 cellmate?
10
MS.
: Okay. So if they
11 knew that. If everybody is saying that they
12 knew he should have had a cellmate, then why
13 didn't he have one?
14
MR.
: That's the -.
15
MS.