FBI unable to solve enduring mystery around Jeffrey Epstein's death
FILE PHOTO: U.S. financier Jeffrey Epstein appears in a photograph taken for the New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services' sex offender registry March 28, 2017 and obtained by Reuters July 10, 2019. New York State Division of Criminal Justice Services/Handout via REUTERS.

An anonymous 4Chan post announcing Jeffrey Epstein's death remains one of the most intriguing unsolved mysteries in the case.

At 8:16 a.m. on August 10, 2019, an anonymous user posted: "don't ask me how I know, but Epstein died an hour ago from hanging, cardiac arrest. Screencap this," beating ABC News by 38 minutes — a significant head start suggesting the poster possessed real-time knowledge of events inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center, reported Business Insider.

The 4Chan user demonstrated fluency in medical jargon, accurately describing Epstein's intubation, fluid infusion and transfer to a lower Manhattan emergency room. Yet the poster also immediately seeded conspiracy theories, claiming someone may have swapped Epstein's body due to a "mysterious van" seen the previous night — narratives that would proliferate across the internet for years.

The Justice Department's investigation went nowhere. FBI agents obtained four IP addresses from 4Chan and subpoenaed both AT&T and T-Mobile seeking subscriber information. AT&T responded that it maintains no records associating dynamic IP addresses with individual accounts. T-Mobile's response remains absent from released files.

Federal prosecutors ultimately admitted they could not identify the anonymous poster, but the failure raises uncomfortable questions. How did someone with real-time jail information access 4Chan? Was the poster a correctional officer, medical personnel or administrative staff? Did they possess advance knowledge or merely rapid access to developing events?

Most tantalizing is Epstein's own 4Chan activity. Newly released files confirm Epstein used 4Chan, occasionally sharing links with associates. The files also reveal Epstein knew 4Chan founder Christopher Poole ("moot"), meeting him for lunch following an introduction by Boris Nikolic, a former science advisor to Bill Gates. Epstein's email to Nikolic praised Poole as "very bright."

This connection raises the possibility that Epstein's 4Chan connections extended beyond casual browsing to deeper network involvement. Did his associates use 4Chan to communicate about his death? Did someone within his orbit post the news?

The DOJ inspector general's 128-page report on Epstein's death addressed systemic failures — non-functioning cameras, missing cellmate — but never mentioned the 4Chan posts.

The government's inability to trace a post containing accurate, real-time information about a high-profile prisoner's death, combined with Epstein's demonstrated 4Chan involvement, suggests that uncomfortable gaps in the official narrative remain.