Buried within the massive February 2026 data dump under the Epstein Files Transparency Act — a staggering trove of over three million pages, 2,000 videos, and 180,000 images — sits one short 37-second clip that has left viewers stunned, disturbed, and deeply skeptical.
The grainy video shows Epstein inside his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York, seated against a plain white wall in a simple grey sweater. Speaking in a shockingly casual, almost lighthearted tone, he appears to record a covert message for two unidentified women.
He first addresses someone off-camera named “Darren,” joking that he is “pretending I’m talking to Darren.” Then, turning to the camera, he asks: “Are you guys having a good time?”
What follows is the moment that defies belief: Epstein casually points out a sore on his face, complaining, “You can see I have a little sore on my face that I got from some black guy trying to kiss me. It’s really disgusting.”
He then adds, with eerie normalcy: “Anyway, I have pictures up on the wall. I had to borrow the scotch tape to get the pictures on the wall.” The clip ends with a simple, “I’ll talk to you guys later. Bye.”

The relaxed delivery — as if chatting from a living room rather than a high-security federal jail while awaiting trial on federal sex trafficking charges — has triggered widespread disbelief. How did a man facing the most serious accusations of his life obtain a recording device and everyday items like scotch tape? What “pictures” was he referring to? Who were the two women, and how did the message leave the facility?
The U.S. Department of Justice has offered no context or explanation. As readers rewatch and reread the transcript attached to that single page, the ordinary tone clashes violently with the monstrous reality of Epstein’s alleged crimes and his mysterious 2019 death.
This one unexpected page hasn’t clarified anything — it has only deepened the mystery, making the entire saga feel more surreal with every viewing.
Leave a Reply