DIGITALLY RECORDED 2019-010614 DEPARTMENT O OFFICE OF THE INS MARCH 16, RESOLUTE DOCUMENTATION SERVICES EFTA00117266

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APPEARANC OR GENERAL OFFICE OF EFTA00117267

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wo wo Today is March 16th, and the time is 55 a.m. The recorder is now on. U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the My name is I am a Special Agent with the U Inspector General, New York Field Office, and these are my credentials. MR. a : This interview with the an official U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the Inspector General investigation. 022. The oday’s date is March 16th, 2 a.m. This interview is being conducted at the Federal Bureau of Prisons Metropolitan Detention Center, Brooklyn, New York, warden’s conference room. Also present are DOJ/OIG Assistant Special “J | ti(‘ésSl This interview will be recorded by me, Special Agent | tti‘(‘aswd Could everyone please themselves for the record, and spell your last name? To start, again, I am DOJ/OIG Special Agent FY This is Special Agent J Wo EFTA00117268

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N WwW wo 7) WwW wo Nh WwW 24 in-Charge and these are La >ral Bureau of Prisons. and you are being asked to voluntarily provide answers to our questions. Will to a voluntary interview with the ‘OIG form Please review Department of Justice, i?) @ 5 oO KR al, Warnings and Assurances rovide Information on a Voluntary “You are being asked to provide information as part tigation being conduc EFTA00117269

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10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 General. This investigation is being conducted pursuant to the Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended. This investigation pertains to job performance failure and security failure. This is a voluntary interview. Accordingly, you do not have to answer questions. No disciplinary action will be taken against you if you choose not to answer questions. Any statement you furnish may be used as evidence in any future criminal proceedings, or agency disciplinary proceeding, or both.” The waiver states, “I understand the Warnings and Assurances stated above, and I am willing to make a statement and answer questions. No promises or threats have been made to me, and no pressure or coercion of any kind has been used against me.” Please review the form and if you understand and agree, please sign where it says Employee Signature. MS. a: Okay. MR. a: And print your name right below that. MS. a: Below that. Okay. MR. a: I'm going to sign on the EFTA00117270

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S) Nh t Nh No N WwW wo 7) WwW wo WwW the interview, oath. your hand right hand? down. And this i What is any try 7) the of Inspector General. the witness and Before starting I would like to place you under questions, and I will try to rephrase it for you. EFTA00117271

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oo wo wo to meet with us today. You previously told us - we'll jump right into it - you met with us in the past MS Yes. a: MR. a: And you previously told us that you were off on August 93th, 2019. That was a Friday. Do you recall? MS. a: On August 9th, 2019? I think on the Friday. I think my last day I was of hh of working was August 8th, I think it was. MR. August 8th. And do you recall mentioning to us about an issue with the camera -- MR. ae: -- system? MS. BJ: ves. MR. a: And you had addressed that situation with the communications technician MS. BJ: ves. MR. a: And you remember mentioned, I think the conversation was between - you want to tell us a little bit about it again? Your recollection of it. MS. a: Sure. I was - after I was EFTA00117272

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10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 reviewing the camera, I was looking for an inmate that may have possibly departed the building. So, I was, I went to the camera to review the, to see if I can backtrack exactly when he left the building. I was present at the SIS office, with the Associate Warden from MCC New York at the time, which is AW J, we both were looking at the camera, and at that moment, I noticed I couldn't rewind on the cameras. So, I couldn't get any playback. At that moment, we stopped, you know, like, searching for the inmate because we couldn't go back any further than the time we were at. And at that time, I notified communications tech a. I called him over the radio and let him know, hey, I'm trying to rewind back the cameras, and the cameras won't rewind. And he said he will come and take a look at the system and see what was going on. And which he did. He did come down and he looked at the system, and he said he has to do overtime to fix the system. At that moment, I notified Captain | tstsi‘i‘zSd I apologized that the cameras was down, and I also provided EFTA00117273

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No Nh wo WwW wo WwW him with a memorandum, letting him know that the camera system was down. MR. ae : Okay. And we were able to -- Before we get into that, and that’s not a you rewind one video at that time, the one you were trying to look at, or did you rewind multiple, to determine that the -? MS. a : No. I went back on quite a few. MR. QJ: «and was that with aw I can't remember if she I was going back at the cameras, to be honest with you. e she was saying -- MR. a : -- she thought it was EFTA00117274

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N N No S) wo WwW wo WwW stayed, but I did go b ing units and MS. a : -- x MS ae: Yes. MR provided to AW J, a to the MCC attorneys, I'mg Government Memorandum. Prisons. MCC New York. York. The date is 17) Me) c QQ n't remember if she ack on different areas, to see ewind. fa a oO So, you did, but ke G Kh Oo wu rt we were able to identify, thre t was gh this docume nd AW i provided this who in turn provided it is the memo that was oing to read it out for the United States 10 EFTA00117275

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ow ~—] wo 10 12 13 14 ine] uw a. SIS Lieutenant to a. Captain. MS. J: 9 m-hon. MR. a : Subject is, “NiceVision (Phonetic Sp. *00:07:26) camera system.” “On August 8th, 2019, at approximately 3:45 p.m., while reviewing the Nice camera system, I attempted to recover video footage from the unit 5-South housing unit.” Ms. QM: 9 ves. MR. a: “At this time, I was unable to recover any previous recordings from the camera. This prompting me to review all of the cameras. None of the cameras on the system were able to record. Therefore, I called communication technician, via radio. At approximately 4:00 p.m., | responding to the third floor phone monitoring room to check the cameras, and notified me that the cameras were not recording, and there was no way to retrieve any video. , stated he fixed the camera system on Friday, August 9th, 2019, when he arrived to work.” Ms. (J: 9 vm-ho. MR. a: Do you recall writing this 11 EFTA00117276

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K 1) n H ifs) this the memo? Okay. Yes. Just to clarify, the date 6 that you wrote the memo will be on 10th? Yes. wo th is) a a 9} x. t= a And August 9th, Ye I'm almost sure I n 4 wasn’t there the Friday. I'm almost sure that 5 I wasn’t in the building. 16 MR. a: That last sentence, that’s wo ie] be wu an # Fh le ct a o - =] Te} co 3) ct t c ct a So, previously, and 20 I think again, you just, I think you assumed 21 you wrote it on August 8th, but it looks like 22 you actually wrote it on the 10th. I did assume that I wrote it N a 7) Nh Oo 3 Nh uw EFTA00117277

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uw fo) 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 19 MS. MR. MMMM: © cic. Ee : So, looking at that now, do you know that it was now written on the 10th, on Thursday, MS. MR. the Saturday, as opposed to on that when you first found out? a : Okay. So, that’s not, like, a misunderstanding? That’s, now looking at it, you’re, like, oh, that’s correct, you actually that you 10th, as MS. when the have had MR. wrote it on -. So, does that mean didn't tell Captain | until the well? WM: «No. I definitely told him cameras was found, because he wouldn't any footage, have anything occur. Ee : Because when we spoke with Captain a. he didn't think he would - or he said he wasn’t told until that Saturday. He says he was never informed on that Thursday or Friday. So, we were just - now seeing that memo - we were trying to think, oh, maybe you were just mistaken because you were very confident, no, I told the Captain, and I provided him the memo. So, seeing that, does that maybe make 13 EFTA00117278

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Nh No wo Ne] WwW a) wo a: No. I'm definitely positive that I told him when the happened, we need to moment. MR. did I noti and I told him I did -- to fixed the camera he arrived to WwW 14 EFTA00117279

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ow oO wo wo - sorry, let me pause for a second. UNKNOWN FEMALE: I'm sorry. Hi. Hi. How are you? MR. a : We’re on a recording, just so you know. MR. J: so -. UNKNOWN FEMALE: Oh, I'm sorry. MR. QJ: Okay. MR. a: Just to clarify, the last statement -- MR. a: -- does that mean that he fixed, stated, now, did | tell you that he fixed the camera on August 9th? Or does it mean that he told you that he will come in on August 9th and fix the camera? MS. QJ: No. On the 8th, he told me he was staying that evening to fix the cameras. When | seen me on the 10th, when I entered the Special Housing Unit, he was in there. I don't know if he was working, if he was doing overtime. But as soon as I entered the Special Housing Unit, Mr. | immediately approached me. Immediately approached me, and I said, EFTA00117280

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10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 16 well, what happened with the camera system? Because we had this conversation that you will fix it on the 8th. And he said I fixed it yesterday. And then, I'm here today, which is the 10th, to finish up. MR. a : So, you mean, he started fixing it yesterday? MS. a: So, I'm assuming that, I don't know if he started, or if he fixed it, but I could only go by what he told me. I fixed the camera system, and I'm here to finish it up. MR. a : Because when you - when we spoke to you last, you had mentioned that you approached him and said, you told me you were going to fix this, and you said, and then he told you at that time, yeah, I came in here today -- MS. QJ: 9 Right. MR. QM: -- to do it. MS. a: Right. So, I was under the assumption he started on the 9th, and he still had - whatever he had left to do on the 10th, and I assume that that’s what he was there to do. EFTA00117281

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ow oO wo MR. a : Okay. So, not that he fixed it on the 9th, but he started to fix it on the 9th? MS. QJ: «Right. I feel like he started to fix it on the 9th, and he was there to finish up, because then he was actually on overtime in an attempt to, if I'm correct. MR. QJ: Okay. MS. a: So, I assumed that he started fixing it, and he was there to attempt to finish it up. MR. ae : So, should that last sentence then read, he began fixing it on the 9th? Instead of he fixed it on the 93th? MS. a: It should, but again, I can't recall. I don’t want to say, you know, because he told me he fixed the cameras. So, fixing to me, I don't know the camera system. So -- MR. a : So, on the 9th, when they knew that they couldn't actually get video, he erday? MS. a: No. On the 9th. I mean, sorry, on the 10th. MR. a : That’s what I mean, on the 10th. rr actually said, I did fix it yes EFTA00117282

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ow oO ~—] 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 19 MS. a: When we arrived, and we realized that there was no video over the 9th. That’s when he stated, I did overtime, I fixed it yesterday. And then, we would, me and him were having a conversation that it’s no video. You can't go back. And his thing was, I'm here to finish up what I started yesterday. MR. QE: uh. Ms. QM: = so, I don’t -- MR. QJ: 9owas it -- MS. a: -- know what he fixed, because fixing to - I'm sorry - fixing can be he bought all of the cameras back up, so the cameras are online, but I don't know if they were online to record, if that makes any sense. MR. Ee : And so, it’s hard for us to understand because if he’s saying he fixed it yesterday, and he’s here to finish it today, that sounds like it means he started fixing it yesterday, and he’s -- Ms. QJ: 9 Right. MR. a : -- but what his words were, he fixed it yesterday? MS. a: His words was, I fixed it yesterday, and I'm here to finish up today. 18 EFTA00117283

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oo wo o wo ine) oO ine] Now, I don't know what the finish up part for today was, to be honest with you. I'm assuming the finishing up part was the to get them to record, because they were blacked out. MS. a: Most of the cameras were blacked out. MR. a : Oh, so, they were actually blacked out? So -- MS. a: It was some cameras that were blacked out where it was no screen at all. MR. QR: okay. MR. a: This was on August 8th? MS. a : On August 8th. got the cameras to not be blacked out anymore, , he actually so meaning, he fixed the cameras that were blacked out, and on the 10th, he was going to get them to start recording? MS. QJ: 9vhat’s what I assume. MS. a: It’s just an assumption because when I got there the 10th, I didn't physically go to see if the black out cameras was back online. EFTA00117284

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S) Nh t Nh No N WwW wo 7) WwW wo WwW say the 10th, him then, recording fi and runni fix the r and run ing to fixed well, then, s? I didn't. No? didn't. Hmm-mm. d But n x to oO 10t the ng, on ecording part. 20 SO, g about, he but the ning, assumption. an assumption what he did. I can e said. he said to on erday, did you ask an't we get the ow, your assumption get them back up h, he was going to EFTA00117285

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wo wo L MS. a: He was there to finish whatever that fixing was, and I'm assuming that it was the recording part because they still weren’t recording on the 10th. MR. a : Okay. But that was an assumption on your end? MS. a : That was just an assumption on my end. MR. a : And you didn ng further on that? a: I didn't ask him anything t ask him MR. a : Okay. Sorry. MS. QJ: §=No, I didn't. MR. a: Do you recall having a conversation with him on the 10th about him not having access to the communication room? MR. QJ: 90n the 9th. Him not being able to access the room because there was no one there to open the door for him? MS. a: No. No. And he would be able to have access to the room because all of the keys are located in the control center. EFTA00117286

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uw fo) 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 19 22 MR. a: But the center control would be locked up, right? MS. a: The control center, they would - my keys would have been locked behind, like, an emergency glass. But he’s accessed my keys in the past to fix the cameras. MR. a : How would he access them? MS. a: He would get permission from the captain to get my keys because that’s who has to authorize the keys. MR. a: And he would go to the captain, and the captain would authorize it, and he could just take the keys? MS. QJ: 31 would hope so -- MR. a: Mm-hmm. MS. a: -- that he would get authorization, but he’s been there late nights when there has been nobody in SIS, fixing the cameras. MR. QJ: 9 And you recall specific situations where the captain has authorized him to take your keys and go into the room? MS. a: I can't say I was present when he authorized him to take the keys. I'm not going to say that I was present. But -- EFTA00117287

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No oo wo o wo ine) oO ine] NS — ine] uw nN Wo MR. ae: But you recall -- MS. a: -- I recall times when I told the captain, hey, | is going to stay late because the camera system is not working, and i] fr) the captain say, okay, I’1l be here. And he would be and have access to that room. MR. a: Does that mean | was given the keys, or the captain would go in and open the door for him? MS. a: That, I'm not sure. MR. : MS. ae: That, I'm not sure. MR. a : So, do you remember around, approximately, what time it was on August 8th that you learned that the cameras were down? MS. ae: It was late in the afternoon. MR. a : And you’re positive it was late in the afternoon? MS. QJ: =t was in the afternoon. MR. a : And when you were determining that these cameras were down, you saw that they were -- because this is the fir we're hearing that there were blacked out cameras, all along we’ve been told they EFTA00117288

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Ne] WwW Ne] WwW wo 24 weren’t recording, so there that they were -- No. You -- were offline completely, with an X, I don't cameras that You couldn't You couldn't see. MR. a: And you’re positive -- I'm positive. EFTA00117289

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ow oO oo wo wo sure you told him on the 8th? Because he wasn’t there. MS. a: No. I spoke to Captain | about the cameras because he asked me, was I going to fix the cameras? I know it definitely was after the lunch, the lunch break. So, between - it was afternoon time - between 12:00, 1:00. MR. ae : All right. So, when you say late afternoon, before, you’re now thinking it was actually early afternoon? MS. a: Well, that’s late afternoon for me when I get it -- MR. QJ: 411 right. MS. a: -- because I get in 5:00 in the morning. So -- MR. a : Okay. MS. a: -- I'm sorry. But it definitely was somewhere after the inmates’ lunch. Between 12:00, 12:00 noon, I want to say between 12:00 and 2:00. In that timeframe. MR. QJ: okay. a: I can't tell you exactly the time. But it definitely was before I went home. EFTA00117290

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ow oO wo wo MR. a : Okay. So, you’re positive they were blacked out, you’re positive you told Captain a: MR. a : Sorry. Go ahead, a. MR. a: How many screens would you think were blacked out? MS. a: I don’t even want to guess because it was a lot of cameras up there, but it was a good many. I know the housing units were recording. The blacked-out cameras, it was a lot of the corridors where we buzzed the doors, and we opened, a lot of the corridors were out. I do remember that. I do remember the units were up. The housing units were up. MR. a: So, let’s talk about that for a second. I know it’s important for the, how important is it for the cameras to be working? MR. QJ: Now, we have two situations. One is, the camera feed not working, which would mean being able to view the cameras live. And second is the actual recordings not working. MS. QJ: 9 Okay. EFTA00117291

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10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 MR. a: So, how important is it for the camera feed to be working at all times? MS. a: Very. MR. a: Compared - I know, let’s talk, separate that out from the actual recordings working. How often do people go in and view the live feeds? MS. QJ: it’s my - this is just, again, I would say it should have been daily because since I’ve been at MCC New York, normal practice was that the communication shop came up every morning, went into that area where, I don't know, like, the motherboard was at. And they checked it. So, that’s what I’ve always was used to happening. And they will say, hey, you got some cameras down, or A, B, Cc, and D, because SIS uses the cameras a lot. You know? We going back for video. We looking for fights. Like, you know, they’re up on our desks sometimes who we’re just seeing who’s doing what. So, I would say daily that they definitely should be monitored. MR. a: Okay. And if the camera feeds were not working, I understand the EFTA00117292

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10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 28 recorder is not, that the recording is not there. And we might have spoken about this in the past, but should | have gone home for the day, or should the recordings, the feeds been fixed immediately? MS. a: I kind of don’t know the process of fixing the feeds because I know it was times he said he had to order new cameras. So, I don't know if they were fixable where he had to order new cameras, and had to wait for cameras to come in. So, I don't even, I don't even know, honestly, if he would have been able to fix those cameras that was out, or if he needed to order new cameras to fix those cameras that was out. MR. a: You mentioned there were quite a few feeds out, right? MS. a: Yes. MR. a : Do you think it was possible that he came in, he told you on the 10th that he came in on the 9th and he fixed them. Is it possible that he replaced all those cameras by the 9th? MS. a: Oh, I don't know. EFTA00117293

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1 MR. ae: Okay. Okay. I don’t know. Any other follow up on that? 4 MR. a : No. I mean, I don’t 5 think he was replacing cameras. 6 talking about, like, hard drives that go with 7 the cameras? 8 MR. a: I think when she said about its) ct D o b Hi 0 Ht ci o ion | | 0 MR. a : Yeah, yeah. 11 MR. ae: -- she meant in order 2 the live feed, he would have to replace ct Oo a) 1) oO un Oo 3 it) e) Fh 3 the cameras. 4 MR. a: So, you think he actually 5 replaced the cameras -- 16 MS. ae: I don't know -- 7 MR. a : -- or something? 8 MS. a: -- if he would have to I know it was instances that \o 8 o ue] peal wu oO o rt a” o =| oa c ct fo 20 he would say, oh, I have to order new camera t th N c ie2) O H wu it) ri) Cc 3 oO ct a w Oo if] o cameras are broke, and 1 MR. a : Okay. Okay. So, on the though, you knew that there was actually d. N ins) Ww Nh ct S D ic 3 a o i) on ct oO 2) i) H 0) re] wu OQ m Nh oo ct = . two problems. One, that they were blacked out; Nh uw EFTA00117294

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oo wo o wo ine) oO ine] ies) =] and two, that they weren’t recording. MS. a: Yes. MR. a : And the ones that weren’t recording, were they the same ones that were blacked out? MS. a: Nothing was recording. At MR. a : Nothing. You couldn't find anything recording? MS. QJ: No. 1 couldn't. MR. Ee : Because our understanding was half of the cameras were recording and half of them weren’t. Just the ones you checked weren’t recording. MS. a: Just the ones I checked. And normally, that would be the housing areas will be where I’11 target because that’s where the inmates at, and that’s where -- MR. QR: Okay. MS. QJ: 9 -- unfortunately, the incidents usually are. MR. a : And what - you said prior - I just want to make sure we’re clear - with the ones that were blacked out were not the housing units? EFTA00117295

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wo wo 24 MS. a: No. I don’t recall any housing MR. a : But the housing units were the ones that weren’t recording? MMM: «=oRight. 1 recording. being blocked out. MS. ww they weren’t problem with basically all of the cameras that you knew of. a: It seemed that way to me now. MR. ae : And did you know, did you provide that information to either AW ia or Captain | ig MS. a: No. Not about the whole system because I kind of don’t know how it works. So, I said to a. hey, you got a lot of areas that’s blacked out. With a red X. MR. a : Okay. And then, knowing all that information, what is it that you told Captain a: Ms. QJ: $9 just told him that I couldn't get any - I couldn't go back. weren’t recording. EFTA00117296

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Ne] WwW WwW MS. a: I didn't say the whole institution is not recording because I didn't know. y- And did him if it was, like, more Or WM: «st can't recall saying more words. MR. a: All right. And what about AW |g Did you, then, fill her in MR. a : -- so, and you never MR. a : -- about it again. EFTA00117297

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oo wo wo ies) Wo MS. a: Hmm-mm . MR. QM: 411 right. And did she know the cameras were down, or did she just know that you were having a problem rewinding? MS. a: I think she - to be honest with you - she only knew that I had a problem because I couldn't playback that one unit. MR. a : Okay. MS. a : Because that’s the unit that we were looking at, which were the cadre units, that they go home and go different places. Because after we couldn't find that inmate, she MR. a: Okay. And have you spoken with AW i since we last spoke? MR. QJ: «No? MS. a : No. MR. a : So, you didn't talk about this matter with her? MS. a: No. I just received, I want to say an email, or it might have been - I can't even say it was after or before, but I did receive notification from her that she CC’d me on an email about my documentation because EFTA00117298

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1 these were my documents that were in her 2 office 3 So, she said, hey, I just want to let them to the warden, whoever 5 the warden was at that time, that was acting. WwW =n included and what about Captain with him since we last ioe) EFTA00117299

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wo WwW wo Nh WwW Nh No ies) uw MR. ae: Do you recall the video that you were trying to pull up on August 8th? When you were trying to rewind. Were you trying to rewind the video for just that day, or c MR. a : And you said it was 5- MS. QJ: 9oIt was 5 -. It was, I think we were looking at 5-South and the 5-South sally port. That may be a little foreign. It’s like the hallway. MR. a : Yeah, sure. MS. a: In between the two doors. MR. ae: That’s where the elevator is. EFTA00117300

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wo wo 20 N ras N Nh N a Nh Nh uw MS. a: 5-South was the cadre unit. MR. a : The cadre unit. MS. a: The cadre units are inmates that was designated to MCC New York. So, they was very in custody inmates, out custody custody inmates, but their designation was to MCC New York. general population, or is it different than general population? MS. ae: No. They’re general population. Yes. They call them the work work around the building, in different departments. MR. a: So, I'm going to clarify that a little bit. A majority of MCC New York, are the inmates awaiting trial? MS. a: Yes. Pre-trial. Ww i=) EFTA00117301

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oo wo wo ive) ~] MR. ae: Pre-trial. Cadre unit, are those inmates already sentenced? MS. ae : Yes. MR. ae: So, these are post-sentence inmates. They are assigned to, already sentenced, and they’re -- MS. a : Okay. York. MR. a : -- yeah. And now, these cadre inmates, do they have any signed to MCC New special privileges? MS. ae: I wouldn't say special privileges, but some do. Meaning, they can work. Work. And what kind of work You have some on the electric detail. Some on the plumbing detail. You have the outside detail, which was the Dayton Manor detail. MR. So, they get to move around a little bit? They move around. Okay. a He K oO cr a oO ket fal =] is) = =] w +] EFTA00117302

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Ne] WwW wo OQ Ne] wo Come ioe) oo MS. a: Well, any inmate that work, a job is known do. to the warehouse. back. MR. a : So, they are, like, low Q. K ) n EFTA00117303

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uw fo) 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 19 39 MR. a: Okay. MR. : | Okay. MR. a : Anything else on -? MR. a : I guess the last question I would say is, do you know what it was you were trying to watch? Like, what happened that caused you to try to watch the 5-South video? MS. a: I do. I can't recall the inmate’s name. We were looking for him because we suspected that he was involved with an incident that OIG Agent HMMM (Phonetic Sp. *00:28:00) was looking into, and myself. So, this inmate name kept coming up. I can't remember if it was phones or, you know, narcotics. I can't remember. But his name kept coming up. And me and PY stated, okay, we’re going to talk to this inmate together, to see if he had any role in what we were looking at. And me and J talked, then I said, this, i. this inmate got released. And that’s what made me go and try to see exactly when he got released, you know, let me track what time he got released, because me and | | had even spoke about going to - if he got released to EFTA00117304

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Nh No N wo WwW wo Ww halfway MR. MR. But thi end dat MR. fway house - we were going to go to the house and speak to him. ing to move on. I have a document here. the record, And I turned this over to The call s is foreign except for the date and the oO a: So, you wouldn't understand, EFTA00117305

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wo wo 20 N c N nN N oy Nh Nh uw xXNnOW you wouldn't MS. Okay. what he Because this is me. So, I'm assuming this is the date somebody made a call. Again, the end and time. What time the other person answered. Just from looking up here, at the top of it. I don't know. Now, did Fe C request that you asked him for? down here, fe that to oO B jen le 0 & fu 07) — a fp. 5 Hy 2) K wu ao wu Bb I w specific call MS. a : I want to -. Well, read the date and time, MR. a : -- maybe that will help. Mm-hmm. Oo wo The answer date is No August 9th, 2019. Mm-hmm. And the end date is EFTA00117306

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oo wo wo c= No ts) io th, 2019. So, it’s the same date, right? And “) the start time is 18: mean U uw oo Qo Ww 5) o rt ~ wu rt 6:58 p.m. MS. EJ: 9 okay. MR. a: The answer time is So, that means -- oO i co Nm ho MS. QJ: okay. Yeah. MR. ae: So, the call, it seems that it lasted about 21 minutes. MS. a: About 20 minu Again, whatever call logs that I asked him for ct es. Yeah. was call logs that was as hey, I need the call log. They asked for it. I know they asked for the Special Housing Units. How many phones were up there. And -- MR. a : And by looking at that, are you able to tell if that was a Special Housing Unit call? MS. a: I don't know. MR. a : Does it show anything on there, a: MR. a: There is a caller station, EFTA00117307

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10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 there is numbers and everything, but it doesn't state specifically. MR. a : Okay. Do you know anybody that made a call from the MCC on August 9th, 2019, at approximately 7:00 p.m. that would be of interest for people that were investigating? MS. a: I don't know. MR. ae : So, do you know anything about Epstein calling and placing a telephone call from the SHU on August 9th, 2019? MS. a: Only word of mouth, that I heard when I got there on the 10th, that he - I want to say the unit manager gave him a call - because that was the discussion - the unit manager gave him a call to his mother. And at that point, they were saying his mother was dead. And I don't know if this is the call, because I don't know how to read it, but I did hear that part of it. MR. a : And do you remember if you asked | for that specific information? Did Epstein place a call? MS. a: I wouldn't have asked him did he place a call? I would have asked him 43 EFTA00117308

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oO oo wo o ine) Oo wo ine] 44 whatever phone numbers that OIG asked me for. MR. Ee : Okay. Now, as far as the information that you just said, which unit manager provided who a call? MS. a: It’s my understanding that Unit Manager | gave Mr. Epstein the call. MR. a : Okay. Sometime on, in the night of August 9th, 2019? MS. a: Mm-hmm. That’s my understanding. But that was just hearsay. People speaking. I didn't witness him give a phone call. No. MR. a : But you don’t know if that’s the call log for him? MS. a: I have no idea. MR. QJ: okay. MR. QJ: and based on that, if this was the request for that, if this was the request for that call log, and this was what the communications tech pulled up, the call log that he pulled up, and this is for the SHU, would this be the phone number listed on the call log? MS. a: Oh, I don't know. MR. QJ: 9 Okay. EFTA00117309

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Ne] WwW Ne] WwW wo MS. a: Because I wouldn't have had the number. MR. ae : Okay. MR. a : And we’1ll just have her initial and both of No problem. On bo initial and date -- memo from MR. MR. a: Do you know what Acknowledg 408 is? MS. Oh, I’ve been out a while. -- could EFTA00117310

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1 MR. a : -- yeah. Give her some 3 MR. ae : I'm going to read. 4 MR. a : So, when someone gets a 5 pack and PIN, or they’re able to use the inmate 6 telephone em, would they have to « i) ign oO something called an Acknowledgement of Inmate 8 form, BP-408? MS. a : I'm not sure. Because I’ve 0 never dealt with their pac! 11 MR. a : So, I'm going to read you 2 this. I'm just going to read you this, so that wo and PIN numbers. 3 you can kind of get a -- 4 MR. a: It’s going to be separate. 5 MR. QM: -- £011. Well, and you 8 MR. a : -- probably understand more. 20 MR. QJ: 9 So, do you know anything Ww G) ie] a] > oO wu 21 about pack and PINs? When an inmate is 22 assigned pack and PINs? 23 MS. ae: Vaguely. A little about the 24 pack and PIN numbers. 25 MR. a: Okay. So, do you know if EFTA00117311

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10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 47 Epstein was assigned a pack and PIN? MS. a: Oh, I don't know. MR. a : Okay. Well, our understanding was Epstein needed to be assigned a pack and PIN, and because he was at attorney conference all the time, he was never available for a pack and PIN to be set up for him. And what we’re trying to find out is, if Epstein was ever assigned a pack and PIN, and if he was assigned a pack and PIN, did he ever sign a form called Acknowledgement of Inmate form, BP-408? MS. a : Oh, I don't know. MR. QJ: what about if an inmate is afforded a legal call? Do they have to sign a form? MS. a: Normally, they request the legal call. This is my knowledge of being a lieutenant. They put a cop-out into their unit team, requesting that a legal phone call, and somebody from their unit team will come up with a logbook, I guess after they verify that that is their attorneys number, and they tell the attorney, okay, we’re going to set up this phone call for 10:00. Then they will go up and EFTA00117312

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ow oO wo give the phone call to the inmate, and log it in the legal call back. any kind of form that they need to sign as But you’re not aware of opposed to just the logbook? I'm not sure because that would be unit team. Okay. But you’re not - you don’t remember a BP-408, an Acknowledgement of Inmate form, or what it is? MS. QJ: No. _. ae: MR. Qa: that’s a form that we’re looking Okay. Where would we find that? for, inmate had signed something like that, where would that be kept? MS. a: I would think it would be in the inmate’s central file. central office? And that would be in the MS. a: And I would think the unit team members would have the central file in their area. MR. a: Okay. in the SHU, it would be in the SHU? And if the inmate was 48 EFTA00117313

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~ 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 49 MS. a: It would still be with the unit team that the inmate was assigned to. MR. a : Okay. And now, I'm going to read you a paragraph here. This is about federal regulations. MS. a: Okay. MR. a : “Federal regulations require that the warden of each BOP institution establish procedures to monitor inmate telephone conversations, which is done to preserve the security and orderly managing of the institution, and to protect the public. For safety and security reasons, BOP policy requires that all inmate telephone calls be made through the inmate telephone system, ITS. BOP policy recognizes that on rare occasion, in times of crisis, inmates may be permitted to make a telephone call outside of the ITS. In such circumstance, the telephone must be placed in a secure area; example, ina locked office, and must be set to record telephone calls. Additionally, the staff member coordinating the call must notify the BOP Special Investigative Services (SIS) via EFTA00117314

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10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 20 22 23 24 email, providing the inmates’ name and register number, the date and time of the call, the number and name of the individual called, and the reason for the call. SIS must enter this information into the telephone recording system within seven days.” MS. a : Okay. MR. a: Do you recall if you ever got notified about a call like this for Mr. Epstein? MS. a: No. MR. a: Okay. Was it standard practice at MCC if an inmate was ever afforded a call like this, would you ever get an email? MS. a: No. I’ve never gotten an MR. a: Were you ever been aware MR. QJ: §9=wWere you ever aware that inmates were given calls like this where a unit team member, let’s just say if an inmate wasn’t given a pack and PIN, a unit team member would sometimes plug a line in to the legal line, and would let them make phone calls to personal -- 50 EFTA00117315

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10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 20 22 23 24 No. -- family members? I didn't know. K4 05) MR. Do you know if that was against policy if they did something like that? MS. In my opinion, yes, it’s against policy because the legal line is fora legal phone call. MR. And what happens if they were to allowed to do something like that? MS. a: What happens to who? MR. a: No. What happens if an inmate is allowed to -? What is a call like that, if they have to make a call toa personal, a personal call, why does the call have to be made on a recorded line? MS. a: Because it can be a safety issue if they have an unmonitored call, because there’s no way for us to go back and listen to the call. It could have been a threat. You know, it could have been something that could have just been a catastrophe, and that you have no way of knowing. That’s why we have that ICS system in place, so we can go back and listen to the 51 EFTA00117316

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10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 52 calls, and we can identify anything that was abnormal. MR. a : And I know this is Monday morning quarterbacking the situation, but a situation like this, with Mr. Epstein, the fact of the circumstances that surrounded what happened between August 93th and 10th, looking back that he was allowed to make a phone call like that on August 9th, should that have been allowed? MS. a: No. In my opinion, no. MR. a: Why not? MS. a : It goes back to what I stated. We have no way of monitoring those phone calls. So, we don’t know if - you know, just an example - if I may, we don’t know if it was to intimidate a witness. We just don’t know the context of the call because we can't go back to listen. We don’t even know in the call if he was saying, hey, I'm feeling like this, because you have no way of going back and listening to that call. MR. a: And being that someone, that he was allowed to make that phone call, should someone have been standing there with him, EFTA00117317

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Ne] WwW WwW monitoring that phone call? log t MR. ae : Okay. And should that have been lse on This one. MR. MR. hat we showed ve. ER: = -- , that’s the call log Oh, that’s the -- thought log that sorry. That call log that that? wi La EFTA00117318

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Nh Nh No wo 7) WwW wo WwW MR. QM: No.) Disregard. MR. a : You can move on. MR. ae: No problem. Now, we’re moving on to August 10th. MR. ae: Would there be a record of the exact time Correctional Officer Tova Noel radio? Like pushed the emergen a: I'm not too sure if -. I know when you key up the radios, they do register on the control panels. In the control center. But I don't know if that’s recorded, how they ran Only Mr. MR. a: So, he would be able to pull Maybe. He would be the MS. a: He would be the only one -- MR. a : -- to answer. Ms. QJ: 9 -- that -- MR. a: Could answer it. u EFTA00117319

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ow oO ~—] wo wi wi MS. a: -- would know if you can go back and pull those timeframes up. MR. a : So, just to run through the day. lLet’s just say Michael Thomas, Tova Noel, the situation, they’re up there on the tier, and they discover Epstein. MS. a: Yes. MR. a: And they wanted to hit the - they wanted to notify control, hey, there is an emergency. How would they notify control? MS. a: They should hit their body alarms which -- MR. a : Which is located where? MS. QJ: 9 -- on their radio. MR. a: So, they both have a radio, or just one person? MS. a: Up in the SHU, they both should have radios. But I don’t know if they both had radios. But I know a body alarm is assigned to the Special Housing. MR. a: It’s assigned. And the body alarm is where? MS. a: The body alarm, one of the officers have to carry it. I'm not too sure if they all do. I really can't remember. But I - EFTA00117320

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Nh No N N wo WwW wo ie] Ww radio tha fu rt J fu ty] w = a Is it separate a button on And once you hit that body one officer b- ct 3) 4 c i) rt wu io 2] ie) on i] fu from the iH) Q wu el like on a button on whole building, should the EFTA00117321

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ow oO wo wo wi ~) MS. a: It’s an orange button. Orange or red button. MR. a: And when they hit it, everyone gets notified? MS. a: It goes across all the radios. MR. a: And what is normal practice? Like, once it hits, what transpires? MS. a: Whoever is in the building responds to that area. When you hit that body alarm, it pops on the control panel, and a big screen, and we can see exactly where it’s coming from. MR. a: Okay. And is that the control officer? MS. a: The control officer will call it. You know, we have a body alarm in the Special Housing Unit. MR. a: And who is supposed to MS. a: Normally, everybody who has a radio and who is not supervising inmates respond to that area. MR. a: Every supervisor? MS. a: If they’re in the building, EFTA00117322

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oo wo o wo ine) oO ine] wi o MR. ae: What about if you are assigned the housing unit? Are you allowed to leave the housing unit? MR. QR: No. MS. a : You’ re not supposed to, no. MR. a: But if, let’s say you’re internal and you’re moving around, you’re supposed to respond? MS. EJ: yes. MR. ae: So, as long as you’re not assigned to a housing unit, and you’re just there in the facility, you’re supposed to Right. Is there certain officer MS. a : No. There is no specific MR. a: Okay. What is the average time it takes for additional correctional officers to respond in a case of emergency? MS. ae : Normally, within two to three EFTA00117323

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10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 MR. a: But it’s not, like, oh, yeah, and you ring the, you put the - or you press the body alarm, it’s like a matter of seconds, oh, yeah, someone is there, it takes about two to three minutes on average? MS. aa: Yes. If somebody is there in a matter of seconds, that mean they’re right outside the door when that alarm went out, but most of the time, we have to get elevators, we have to run up the stairs. So, we have to get to the area. MR. a: Okay. Is there one officer controlling the elevator? MS. QJ: 9 The control center is controlling the elevator. MR. a: So, that control officer would have to know where the officers -- MS. a: To pick -- MR. a: -- are going? MS. QR: 9 -- everybody up. Because everybody will come across the radio. Hey, pick me up on two. Pick me up on three. Pick me up on four. So, that officer has to start picking up from every floor. MR. a: Do they keep a log of EFTA00117324

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10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 everything that transpires when an emergency happens? MS. a: What do you mean, a log of everything -- MR. a: Let’s just say -- MS. aa: -- that transpires? MR. a : -- like, the stuff that comes over the radio. Like, the calls that come over, and when a body alarm is hit, do they keep track of, hey, this call came over the call, or this person responded. The practice should be, once the body alarm goes off, that control center has a logbook, as well. So, the control center officer should have that in their logbook. 7:15, a body alarm went off in the Special Housing Unit, for MR. : lieutenant, and I let’s say at 7:20, example. Okay. And if I was the responding cleared that body alarm, that logbook should also say, 7:20, body alarm cleared by Lieutenant a. un. i: Okay. And this logbook, it’s called the control officer logbook? 60 EFTA00117325

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No WwW wo wo Oo) ay MS. BJ: ves. MR. FY : Okay. Okay. MR. a : How often do body alarms ra’ go off? Or would they, around that time? Is ct that, like, a daily occurrence, or is i MS. a : I want to say almost daily, MR. a : Okay. So, people are very familiar with what to do when a body alarm MS. EJ: = ves. MR. a : -- goes off. Now, just a quick question. If an operations lieutenant is relieved at, like, 6:00 a.m., let’s prior, the alarm goes off at 6:33, but that operations lieutenant is still in the building, working on documentation, would that operations lieutenant, even though they’ve been relieved, would they be required to respond -- MR. a : -- they should still respond? MS. a : Yes. MR. a : So, even though they’ve @ y should. Yes. EFTA00117326

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10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 19 been relieved for their shift -- MS. a: Yes. MR. a : -- should -. MS. a : You still should respond because you’re physically still in the building. MR. a : Okay. And would that operations lieutenant have given back their radio, though, already if they were already relieved? Or would they still have a radio on them? MS. a: If they’re sitting in the office, well, let me backtrack so I don’t seem confusing. The operations lieutenant that was relieved would turn the radio up to the relieving lieutenant. So, we’re not assigned individual radios. You have one assigned for operations lieutenant, and one assigned for activities lieutenant. So, if I relieve you, QR, I'm going to give you - you’re going to give me your radio and your keys. MR. Ee : So, if that person was relieved, and then is working on documentation, how would they know that a body alarm was 62 EFTA00117327

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Nh No N N WwW wo WwW fee} wo ie] Ww oO Wo Normally, you hear it. like, because t’s a loud sound? a: Yes. MR. a : Does it institution? MS. a: It just go on the radios, but it’s really loud. radios? A if somebody is U using the bathroom, if they have their radio, you hear it. MS. ae: You hear it. radio is going off outside of the bathroom, in, like, if a if they don’t have their radio in the bathroom, is that what you mean? You’1l hear it. a: You’1l hear it. restroom would hear a radio that was outside of EFTA00117328

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oo wo wo oO the restroom, is what you mean? MS. a: Yes. MR. a : Okay. MS. ae: And then, the lieutenant’s office, the way it’s set up in MCC New York, is we also have the Nice camera system set up with big screen TVs, as such. So, if you are there ct and you see people running, your first instinct going to be, what’s going on? Everybody is running. MR. ae: So, if you’re still in the office, and -- MS. a : If you’re in the office. MR. ae: -- office, and you’re still doing work -- MS. J: 9m-hon. MR. a : -- you should be able to see. MS. a : Yes, because I think it’s about three or four big screen TVs in there. MR. a : Now, is it a requirement policy on if you’ve been relieved, but you definitely should respond. EFTA00117329

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No WwW wo wo 24 oO uw MR. a : Okay. Would that be a sound correctional judgment? MS. ae : Yes. MR. a: I'm going to move on. MR. ae : Yup. MR. ae: I'm going to, this document that I'm showing you -- ts) 9th, 2019. And then, Saturday, August 10th, 2019. know what this document is? MS. a : Yes. Well, this is called the SHU locator form. MR. a: What does that mean MS ae: It’s basically all of the ranges in SHU, and the cell numbers, and the inmates that’s assigned to the cells. cell assignments, who’s the cell, assigned to what cell. MR. a: Okay. And then, the bottom EFTA00117330

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N WwW wo WwW fee} wo here, on L-tier, 220-U, and 220-L. Who are the ssigned on there? Yes. MR. a : What doe Common fear. Common fear that mean? I don't n MR. | 7 a: a: 7 a That’s the common fear. I just wanted to get re her initial and EFTA00117331

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uw fo) 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 19 “United States Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Prisons Receipt.” This i 2019. Received f + MCC New York. Transfer s dated Friday, August 9th, rom ae . Warden MCC New York. “Following United States prisoners. Sorry, it’s a lit MR. : complete files fo USMS, SDNY.” Wha vn. : these documents? that is. Well, i don’t know when they do it, and for, obviously, why they do it. MR. : these before? seen the transfer ve. [: think this is one out to the units, that are getting tle tough to read. No. “Prisoners together with r transfer as indicated WAB, t is this document? I have -. This is an R&D -. So, you’ve never seen one of Documents. I don't know what t’s a transfer receipt. But I I don't know. But you’ve never seen one of No. I’ve never physically receipt. And this is not, you don’t of those documents that goes saying these are the inmates transferred? 67 EFTA00117332

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oO. o 1 MS. a: Hmm. I don't think so. 2 Because I’ve never seen it. As a lieutenant, I icer Ph 3 would have seen it, and if we had good of 7) 4 in there, I would have received a as 5 only seen the roste The 6 ters. Never the transfer receipts 8 MR. a : And when you say it’s a transfer receipt, does that mean that it’s wo 11 MS. a: I don't know. I don't know. 4 MR. a: The signature on that bottom. 5 Do you recognize that name by any chance? 8 MS. QJ: §39 (indiscernible *00:50:39). I don't know who that is. 20 MR. : wo No problem. 21 MR. a : Two minutes. Two 22 minutes. N a a MR. ae: And this is just the last Ne n o ct Nh uw EFTA00117333

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wo wo 20 N ras N ho N a Nh Nh uw MR. What I'm showing you are pictures. It is in black and white. Unfortunately, we were not able to print it in color. There’s two pictures here. I need - you to initial these after. ae: These are, these pictures were taken by the coroner’s office, just to clarify. MS. Okay. MR. And these were taken at the McC, just to clarify. These look like AED machines? MS. this is? And do you know what It looks like a -- (Indiscernible *00:51:24). -- a home-made noose. A home-made noose. 5 Do you know what this is? And to us, in the - because it’s in black and white, and I know in the picture it looks black ) Oo) EFTA00117334

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oo wo o wo ine) oO ine] ~l =] MS. \ I “+ ie] c u B 5 MR. color, it looks like a curtain. No. It looks -. How can I - z ou ? %It’s like a divider. Okay. On wheels. a That’s what we need you to clarify. So, where is this picture taken? i) MS. a: I'm not too sure where they took this picture at. MR. The divider on wheels. Was this something that was brought up to the SHU, or was this somewhere else? MS. I don't know. I don't know. MR. Do you recall something like that, like, that was brough up into the SHU to cover up Epstein’s cell, or was this brought in the health center to help? MS. a: I don't know. MR. QJ: 9 Would the dix an inmate committed suicide - would a divider ider be - if be put up outside of his cell so that other inmates can't see what’s going on? EFTA00117335

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Nh No N N WwW wo WwW fee} wo ie] Ww up. initial a divider put up after Ep that - because it wa was no Do Sac don’t No problem. Can y I’ve never seen a divider put been a lieutenant. you know if there was stein was removed, so KNOW. a divider. to share with us, uld be pertinent EFTA00117336

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Ne] WwW Ww Nothing that I touched on taking time. All right. Thank No problem. Oh, and just, ye Thank MS. You're welcome. MR. hing when for still now EFTA00117337

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1 i. The time is 10:48 a.m., 2 uw fo) 10 11 12 13 17 18 19 stopping the recorder. and we are EFTA00117338

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CERTIFICATE that the represent an accurate transcript or srding of or General in the matt EFTA00117339

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Ca) Able - 9:3, 10:14, 11:14, 21:21, 21:24, 26:22, 28:13, 42:20, 46:5, 54:18, 64:18, 69:3 Abnormal - 52:2 Above - 5:14 Access - 21:18, 21:21, 21:24, 22:7, 23:6 Accessed - 22:5 Accordingly - 5:6 Acknowledgement + 45:21, 46:7, 47:11, 48:9 Across - 57:5, 59:21 Act - 5:2 Acting - 34:5 Action - 5:8 Activated - 63:1 Activities - 62:19 Actual - 26:23, 27:5 Addressed - 7:17 AED - 69:12 Afforded - 47:15, 50:13 Afternoon - 23:17, 23:19, 23:20, 24:21, 25:7, 25:10, 25:11, 25:12 Against - 5:8, 5:18, 61:5, 51:7 Agency - 5:12 Agent - 3:1, 3:4, 3:20, 3:22, 3:25, 4:2, 39:11, 72:25 Agree - 4:14, 5:19 Ahead - 14:19, 14:21, 21:15, 26:5, 40:5, 46:19 Alarm - 55:19, §5:22, 55:23, 56:11, 56:16, 56:18, 56:21, 57:11, 57:17, 59:3, 59:8, 60:9, 60:13, 60:16, 60:20, 60:22, 61:10, 61:16, 62:25 Alarms - 55:12, 56:22, 61:3, 61:8 Allowed - 51:10, 51:13, 52:8, 52:10, 52:24, 58:3 Amended - 5:3 Anymore - 19:16 Apologized - 8:24 Appointment - 24:2 4 Approached - 15:2 4, 15:25, 16:15 Approximately - 11: 5, 11:17, 23:14, 43:5 Area - 27:12, 48:23, 49:21, 57:10, 57:23, 59:11 Areas - 10:6, 30:16, 31:18 Arrived - 11:23, 14:24, 18:1, 71:14 Assignment - 58:20 Assignments - 65:2 3 Assistance - 10:15 Assistant - 3:19, 4:2 Associate - 8:7 Assumed - 12:20, 17:9 Assumption - 16:22 , 19:22, 20:6, 20:8, 20:22, 21:6, 21:7 Assurances - 4:20, 5:14 Attempt - 17:7, 17:10 Attempted - 11:7 Attesting - 45:10 Attorney - 47:5, 47:24 Attorneys - 10:17, 47:23 Authorization - 22: 17 Authorize - 22:10, 22:12 Authorized - 22:21, 22:24 Available - 47:6 Average - 58:21, 59:5 AW - 8:8, 9:9, 9:16, 10:16, 31:13, 32:17, 33:15 Awaiting - 36:24 Aware - 48:3, 50:17, 50:20 Backtrack - 8:4, 62:13 Based - 41:11, 44:17 Basis - 4:22 Bathroom - 63:13, 63:18, 63:20 Began - 17:13 Behind - 22:4 Below - 5:23, 5:24 Big - 9:10, 57:11, 64:7, 64:20 Bit - 7:23, 36:23, 37:22 Black - 19:24, 24:10, 69:2, 69:24, 69:25 Blacked - 19:4, 19:7, 19:9, 19:11, 19:16, 19:18, 23:24, 26:2, 26:7, 26:11, 29:25, 30:5, 30:24, 31:18 Blocked - 31:2 BOP - 49:8, 49:13, 49:16, 49:25 Both - 5:12, 8:8, 45:5, 45:6, 55:15, 56:17, 55:19 Bottom - 65:25, 68:14 Bought - 18:13 BP - 45:21, 45:22, 45:23, 46:8, 47:12, 48:9 Break - 25:7 Broke - 29:21 Brooklyn - 3:17, 6:8 Brough - 70:18 Brought - 70:14, 70:19 Building - 8:3, 8:5, 12:15, 36:20, 56:11, 57:9, 57:25, 61:17, 62:6 44:6 Bureau - 3:10, 3:16, 4:9, 10:23, 67:2 Button - 54:9, 56:5, 56:7, 57:1, 57:2 Buzzed - 26:12 a CIF - 66:5, 66:6, 66:7 Cadre - 33:10, 36:2, 36:3, 36:6, 36:8, 37:1, 37:10 Cadres - 36:20, 38:6 Called - 8:16, 11:15, 46:7, 47:11, 50:3, 56:20, 56:22, 60:25, 65:14 Caller - 42:25 Calling - 43:10 Calls - 49:14, 49:23, 50:21, 50:25, 52:1, 52:15, 60:8 Can't - 9:18, 10:4, 17:15, 18:6, 20:9, 20:15, 22:23, 25:23, 32:9, 32:11, 32:14, 33:23, 39:8, 39:14, 39:15, 52:19, 55:25, 64:23, 70:25 Captain - 8:24, 11:1, 13:11, 13:17, 13:24, 22:9, 22:12, 22:21, 23:3, 23:5, 23:8, 24:23, 25:3, 26:3, 31:14, 31:21, 34:19 Carry - 55:24 Case - 58:23 Catastrophe - 51:2 2 Caused - 39:7 CC'd - 33:24 Cell - 65:18, 65:23, 65:24, 70:19, 70:24 Cells - 65:19 Center - 3:17, 21:25, 22:1, 22:3, 54:14, 59:14, 60:13, 60:14, 70:20 Central - 48:18, 48:20, 48:22 Certain - 58:17 Chance - 68:15 Charge - 3:20, 4:3 Check - 11:18 Checked - 27:14, 30:13, 30:15, 32:6 Choose - 5:8 Circumstance - 49: 20 Circumstances - 52 6 Clarification - 66:20 Clarify - 12:5, 12:19, 14:25, 15:9, 36:22, 69:9, 69:12, 70:10 Cleared - 60:20, 60:22 Coercion - 5:17 Color - 69:4, 70:3 Com - 40:12, 54:17 Come - 8:19, 8:21, 15:15, 28:11, 38:13, 47:21, 59:21, 60:8 Comes - 60:7 Coming - 32:10, 39:13, 39:16, 57:13 Committed - 70:23 Common - 66:10, 66:18 Communication - 1 1:15, 21:18, 27:11 Communications - 7:18, 8:15, 44:20 Community - 36:11 Compared - 27:4 Complete - 67:9 Completely - 24:6 Conducted - 3:11, 3:16, 4:25, 5:1 Conference - 3:18, 47:6 Confident - 13:23 Confusing - 62:14 Context - 46:2, 52:18 Control - 21:25, 22:1, 22:3, 54:13, 55:9, 55:10, 57:11, 57:15, 57:16, 59:14, 59:16, 60:13, 60:14, 60:25 Controlling - 59:13, 59:15 Conversation - 7:2 2, 16:2, 18:5, 21:17 Conversations - 49 10 Coordinating - 49:2 4 Cop - 47:19 Copy - 68:4 Coroner's - 69:8 Correctional - 54:8, 58:22, 65:2 Corridors - 26:12, 26:13 Couldn't - 8:10, 8:11, 8:13, 17:20, 24:11, 24:13, 30:8, 30:10, 31:23, 33:7, 33:12 Cover - 70:19 Created - 68:10 Credentials - 3:7, 4:4 Crime - 71:9 Criminal - 5:11 Crisis - 49:17 Curtain - 70:4 Custody - 36:10, 36:11 a Daily - 27:9, 27:22, 61:5, 61:7 + 54:17 + 8:24, 11:1, 13:11, 13:17, 24:23, 25:4, 26:3, 31:14, 31:21, 34:20 Date - 3:14, 10:25, 12:5, 40:23, 40:24, EFTA00117340

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41:5, 41:15, 41:19, 41:22, 41:25, 42:1, 45:5, 45:7, 50:2, 66:23, 71:6 Dated - 65:10, 65:11, 67:3 Day - 7:9, 24:24, 28:4, 35:4, 35:5, 35:7, 55:4 Days - 50:6 Dayton - 37:19 - 39:11, 39:16 Dead - 43:18 Dealt - 46:10 Death - 4:11 Definitely - 13:13, 14:2, 25:6, 25:19, 25:24, 27:23, 64:25 Dennis - 3:20, 4:3, 6:2 Departed - 8:2 Department - 3:5, 3:12, 4:19, 67:1 Departments - 36:2 1 Designated - 36:9 Designation - 36:12 Desks - 27:21 Detention - 3:17 Determine - 9:13 Determining - 23:2 2 Didn't - 10:11, 13:11, 13:17, 19:23, 20:17, 20:19, 21:9, 21:11, 21:14, 32:1, 32:2, 33:19, 44:11, 51:3, 71:16 Different - 10:6, 33:11, 36:15, 36:21 Disciplinary - 5:7, §:12 Discover - 55:6 Discrepancy - 9:8, 9:10 Disregard - 54:1 Divider - 70:6, 70:13, 70:22, 70:23, 71:1, 71:8, 71:11, 71:17, 71:18 HN - 24:24 Document - 10:15, 40:6, 65:7, 65:13, 66:25, 67:10 Documentation - 3 3:25, 61:18, 62:24 Documents - 34:1, 34:11, 34:18, 45:7, 45:11, 67:13, 67:14, 67:23 Doesn't - 43:1 DOJ/OIG - 3:19, 3:25, 4:3, 4:10, 4:15, 4:17 Door - 21:22, 23:9, 59:8 Doors - 26:13, 35:22 Drivers - 38:10 Drives - 29:6 rs Each - 49:8 Early - 24:24, 25:11 - 8:8, 9:9, 9:16, 10:16, 31:13, 32:17, 33:15 Electric - 37:17 Elevator - 35:23, 59:13, 59:15 Elevators - 59:9 Email - 33:22, 33:25, 50:1, 50:14, 50:16 Emergencies - 58:1 8 Emergency - 22:5, 54:9, 55:10, 58:23, 60:1 Employee - 3:10, 4:20, 5:20 Enter - 50:4 Entered - 15:19, 15:23 Epstein - 4:12, 43:10, 43:23, 44:6, 47:1, 47:4, 47:9, 50:10, 52:5, 55:6, 66:4, 71:8 Epstein's - 66:6, 70:19 Establish - 49:9 Evening - 15:18 Events - 4:11 Everybody - 57:21, 59:20, 59:21, 64:9 Everybody's - 56:1 2 Everyone - 3:23, 57:4, 63:3 Everything - 41:8, 43:1, 60:1, 60:4, 72:2 Evidence - 5:11 Example - 49:21, 52:16, 60:17 Except - 40:23 Expecting - 72:21 Explain - 36:6 [LF Facility - 38:7, 58:14 Failure - 5:5 Family - 51:2 Far - 9:7, 44:2 Fear - 66:10, 66:18 Federal - 3:10, 3:16, 4:9, 10:23, 49:5, 49:7, 67:1 Feed - 26:21, 27:2, 29:9, 29:12 Feeds - 27:7, 27:25, 28:4, 28:7, 28:18 Feel - 17:4 Feeling - 52:21 Felt - 72:2 FEMALE - 15:2, 15:7 Field - 3:6 Fights - 27:20 File - 48:18, 48:22 Files - 67:9 Fill - 6:4, 32:17 Find - 30:9, 33:12, 47:8, 48:13 Finishing - 19:3 First - 12:18, 13:5, 23:24, 64:8 Fix - 8:23, 14:15, 15:16, 15:18, 16:3, 16:16, 17:2, 17:5, 17:21, 20:25, 22:6, 25:5, 28:13, 28:15, 32:10 Fixable - 28:9 Fixing - 16:7, 17:10, 17:13, 17:17, 18:12, 18:19, 21:2, 22:18, 28:7 Floor - 11:18, 59:24 Follow - 29:3 Following - 12:9, 67:5 Footage - 11:7, 13:15, 14:7 Foreign - 35:19, 40:23 Form - 4:17, 4:18, 5:18, 6:4, 45:21, 46:8, 47:11, 47:12, 47:16, 48:4, 48:10, 48:14, 65:15 Found - 13:5, 13:14 Four - 59:23, 64:20 Friday - 7:7, 7:9, 11:22, 12:14, 13:20, 14:24, 65:10, 67:3 Full - 46:15 Further - 8:14, 21:10 Future - 5:11 a | Gave - 34:4, 41:4, 43:14, 43:16, 44:6 General - 3:6, 3:13, 4:20, 5:1, 5:2, 6:1, 36:14, 36:15, 36:16 Gets - 46:4, 57:4 Give - 34:6, 41:10, 44:11, 45:24, 46:1, 48:1, 62:21 Given - 23:8, 50:21, 50:23, 62:8 Glass - 22:5 Gone - 28:3 Good - 26:10, 68:3 Got - 19:16, 19:23, 20:2, 27:16, 31:17, 39:21, 39:23, 39:24, 39:25, 43:13, 50:8, 66:11, 71:10 Government - 10:2 3 Guess - 26:8, 39:4, 47:22 Guys - 72:2 a | Half - 30:12 Halfway - 40:1, 40:2 Hallway - 35:20 Hand - 6:12, 6:19 Happening - 27:15 Hard - 18:16, 29:6 Haven't - 34:24 Health - 70:20 Hear - 43:20, 63:2, 63:4, 63:5, 63:14, 63:16, 63:21, 63:23, 63:25 Heard - 43:13 Hearing - 23:24 Hearsay - 44:10 Help - 41:18, 70:20 He's - 18:17, 18:18, 18:20, 22:5, 22:17, 54:17 Hey - 8:17, 23:3, 27:16, 31:17, 32:9, 34:3, 42:16, 52:20, 55:9, 59:21, 60:10 Hi - 15:2 Hit - 55:8, 55:11, 56:10, 57:3, 57:10, Home - 25:25, 28:3, 33:11, 69:18, 69:19 Honest - 9:22, 19:2, 33:5 Honestly - 28:13 Hope - 22:14 House - 40:1, 40:2 Housing - 10:6, 11:8, 15:20, 15:24, 26:10, 26:15, 30:16, 30:25, 31:2, 31:3, 42:17, 42:21, 55:20, 57:18, 58:3, 58:4, 58:13, 60:17 a - 7:19 ICS - 51:24 I - 4:18 Ill - 23:5, 30:17 Immediately - 15:24 , 15:25, 28:5 Important - 26:17, 26:18, 27:1 Incidents - 30:21 Indicated - 67:9 Indiscernible - 68:1 8, 69:17 Informed - 13:19 Initial - 45:5, 45:7, 66:22, 69:5, 71:6 Inmates - 30:18, 36:8, 36:10, 36:11, 36:24, 37:2, 37:5, 37:10, 38:3, 38:18, 38:23, 49:17, 50:21, 57:22, 65:19, 66:2, 67:24, 70:25 Inmates' - 25:19, 50:1 Inmate's - 39:9, 48:18 Inspector - 3:6, 3:13, 4:19, 4:25, 5:2, 6:1 Instinct - 64:8 Institution - 32:2, 49:8, 49:12, 63:10 Interest - 43:6 Internal - 58:9 Interview - 3:9, 3:15, 3:21, 4:15, 5:6, 6:10, 6:16 Intimidate - 52:17 Investigating - 43:7 Investigation - 3:13 4:11, 4:24, 5:1, 5:4, 71:25 Investigative - 49:2 5 Issue - 7:12, 51:18 EFTA00117341

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I've - 27:10, 27:14, 45:22, 46:9, 50:15, 67:20, 68:2, 68:5, 71:1, 71:4 Jeffrey - 4:12 a = 6:24 Job - 5:4, 38:3 Judgment - 65:2 Jump - 7:2 Justice - 3:5, 3:12, 4:19, 67:1 a Key - 54:12 Keys - 21:25, 22:4, 22:6, 22:9, 22:10, 22:13, 22:22, 22:24, 23:8, 62:22 Knowing - 31:20, §1:23 Knowledge - 47:18 Known - 37:25, 38:3 Lasted - 42:12 Late - 22:17, 23:3, 23:17, 23:19, 24:21, 25:10, 25:12 Learned - 23:15 Leave - 38:7, 38:9, 58:4, 72:18 Left - 8:5, 16:23, 24:24, 32:19, 32:20, 33:13 Legal - 34:6, 47:15, 47:18, 47:20, 48:2, 50:24, 51:7, 51:8 Let's - 26:16, 27:4, 50:22, 55:4, 58:8, 60:5, 60:21, 61:15 Letters - 66:6 Letting - 9:1 Lieutenant - 3:10, 3:20, 4:7, 6:11, 11:1, 47:19, 60:20, 60:22, 61:14, 61:17, 61:19, 62:8, 62:14, 62:16, 62:19, 62:20, 68:2, 71:4, 72:13 Lieutenant's - 64:4 Line - 50:24, 51:7, §1:16 Listed - 44:22 Listening - 52:22 Located - 21:25, §5:13 Locator - 65:15 Locked - 22:2, 22:4, 49:22 Log - 40:22, 41:2, 41:13, 42:16, 44:14, 44:19, 44:20, 44:23, 45:15, 48:1, 53:4, 53:10, 53:16, 53:17, 53:20, 53:24, 54:16, 59:25, 60:3 Logbook - 47:22, 48:5, 60:14, 60:15, 60:21, 60:24, 60:25 Logged - 53:4 Logs - 40:20, 42:14, 42:15 Long - 58:12 Look - 8:19, 9:12, 56:24, 69:12 Looked - 8:22 Looking - 8:1, 8:8, 13:2, 13:8, 27:19, 33:10, 35:18, 39:9, 39:12, 39:19, 40:10, 41:8, 42:19, 48:14, 52:7 Lot - 26:9, 26:12, 26:13, 27:17, 31:18 Loud - 63:7, 63:12 Low - 38:17 Lunch - 25:6, 25:20 + 3:1, 3:4, 3:22, 3:25, 6:5, 42:24, 72:25 a Machines - 69:13 Majority - 36:23 Make - 5:15, 13:25, 30:23, 49:18, 50:25, 51:14, 52:8, 52:24 Manager - 43:14, 43:16, 44:4, 44:6 Managing - 49:11 Manor - 37:19 Many - 26:6, 26:10, 42:18 March - 3:2, 3:14 MCC - 8:7, 10:17, 10:24, 27:10, 36:9, 36:12, 36:23, 37:7, 38:9, 38:24, 43:4, 50:13, 64:5, 67:2, 67:4, 69:12 MDC - 6:8, 72:16, 72:21 Meal - 66:11, 66:16 Means - 18:19, 42:2, 42:6 Meant - 29:11 Meet - 7:1 Member - 49:24, 50:22, 50:23 Members - 48:22, 51:2 Memo - 10:20, 12:1, 12:3, 12:6, 13:21, 13:25, 34:10, 45:14 Memorandum - 9:1, 10:23 Mentioning - 7:12 Met - 7:2 Metropolitan - 3:17 a - 55: Mistaken - 13:23 Misunderstanding -13:8 Mm - 11:2, 11:24, 20:21, 22:15, 33:1, 41:21, 41:24, 42:7, 44:9, 64:17, 66:21, 70:2 Monday - 52:3 Monitor - 49:9 Monitored - 27:23 Monitoring - 11:18, 52:14, 53:1 Morning - 25:16, 27:12, 52:4 Mother - 43:16, 43:18 Motherboard - 27:1 3 Mouth - 43:12 Move - 37:21, 37:23, 40:4, 54:3, 65:5 Moving - 54:5, 58:9 Multiple - 9:13 CN) Narcotics - 39:15 Ma - 67:4 Needed - 28:14, 47:4 New - 3:6, 3:17, 8:7, 10:24, 27:10, 28:8, 28:10, 28:15, 29:20, 36:9, 36:12, 36:23, 37:7, 64:5, 67:2, 67:5 Nice - 11:6, 64:6 Nicevision - 11:3 Night - 44:8 Nights - 22:17 Nobody - 22:18 Noel - 54:8, 55:4 Noon - 25:20 Noose - 69:18, 69:19 Normal - 27:10, 57:7 Normally - 30:16, 47:17, 57:21, 58:24, 63:2 Note - 53:9 Notification - 33:24 Notified - 8:15, 8:24, 11:19, 50:9, 57:4 Notify - 14:11, 49:24, 55:9, 55:10 Numbers - 43:1, 44:1, 46:10, 46:24, 65:18 [Co Occasion - 49:17 Occur - 13:15 Occurrence - 61:5 Office - 3:5, 3:6, 3:12, 4:19, 4:25, 6:1, 8:6, 34:2, 48:20, 49:22, 62:13, 64:5, 64:13, 64:14, 64:15, 69:8 Officer - 54:8, 56:13, 56:15, 57:15, 57:16, 58:17, 59:12, 59:16, 59:23, 60:15, 60:25 Officers - 55:24, 58:23, 59:17, 68:3 Official - 3:12, 4:10 Offline - 24:6 Often - 27:6, 61:3 OIG - 10:18, 39:11, 40:18, 42:15, 44:1 HM - 39:16, 39:20, 39:21, 39:24 Ones - 30:3, 30:4, 30:13, 30:15, 30:24, 31:4 Online - 18:14, 18:15, 19:25 Open - 21:22, 23:9 Opened - 26:13 Operations - 61:14, 61:17, 61:18, 62:8, 62:14, 62:18 Opinion - 51:6, §2:11 Opposed - 13:4, 48:5 Orange - 57:1, 57:2 Order - 28:8, 28:10, 28:15, 29:11, 29:20 Orderlies - 38:1, 38:4 Orderly - 49:11 Overtime - 8:23, 14:15, 15:22, 17:7, 18:3 a Pack - 46:5, 46:10, 46:21, 46:22, 46:24, 47:1, 47:5, 47:7, 47:9, 47:10, 50:23 Panel - 57:11 Panels - 54:13 WM - 10:24 Past - 7:3, 22:6, 28:3 Pause - 15:1 People - 27:6, 43:6, 44:11, 61:9, 64:8 Performance - 5:5 Permanent - 38:23 Permission - 22:8 Permitted - 49:18 Person - 41:7, 55:16, 60:11, 62:23, 63:24 Personal - 50:25, §1:15 Phone - 11:18, 44:1, 44:12, 44:22, 47:20, 47:25, 48:1, 50:25, §1:8, 52:8, 52:15, 52:24, 53:1 Phones - 39:14, 42:18 Physical - 68:6 Physically - 19:24, 62:5, 67:20 Pick - 59:18, 59:22 Picking - 59:24 Picture - 69:25, 70:10, 70:12 Pictures - 69:2, 69:4, 69:7 Pile - 34:18 PIN - 46:5, 46:10, 46:24, 47:1, 47:5, 47:7, 47:9, 47:10, 50:23 Pins - 46:21, 46:22 Place - 6:7, 6:10, 43:23, 43:25, 51:25 Placed - 49:21 Places - 33:11 Placing - 43:10 Playback - 8:11, 33:7 Plug - 50:24 Plumbing - 37:18 Policy - 49:14, 49:16, 51:5, 51:7, 64:24 EFTA00117342

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Pops - 57:11 Population - 36:14, 36:15, 36:17 Port - 35:19 Positive - 14:2, 14:16, 14:18, 23:18, 24:14, 24:17, 24:20, 26:2 Post - 37:4 Practice - 27:11, 50:13, 57:7, 60:12 Pre - 36:25, 37:1, 38:3 Present - 3:19, 8:6, 9:17, 22:23, 22:25 Preserve - 49:11 Press - 59:2 Pressure - 5:17 Previous - 11:11, 35:5 Previously - 7:1, 7:5, 12:19 Print - 5:22, 69:3 Prior - 30:22, 61:16 Prisoner - 68:10 Prisoners - 67:5, 67:8 Prisons - 3:10, 3:16, 4:9, 10:24, 67:2 Privileges - 37:11, 37:13 Problem - 31:8, 33:4, 33:6, 45:6, 45:13, 54:4, 68:20, 71:5, 72:6, 72:11 Problems - 29:25 Procedures - 49:9 Proceedings - 5:11 Promises - 5:16 Prompting - 11:12 Protect - 49:12 Provide - 4:13, 4:21, 4:23, 31:13 Provided - 8:25, 10:16, 10:17, 13:24, 40:12, 40:14, 44:4 Providing - 50:1 Public - 49:12 Pull - 35:2, 54:18, §5:2 Pulled - 44:20, 44:21 Pursuant - 5:2 Pushed - 54:9 Ca) Quarterbacking - 5 2:4 Quick - 61:14 es R&D - 67:11 Radios - 54:12, 55:18, 55:19, 57:6, 62:17, 63:10, 63:11 Raise - 6:11 Ran - 54:15 Ranges - 65:18 Rare - 49:16 Realized - 18:2 Reason - 50:4 Reasons - 49:13 Receipt - 67:3, 67:15, 67:21, 68:9 Receipts - 68:6 Receive - 33:24 Received - 33:21, 67:4, 68:4 Recognize - 68:15 Recognizes - 49:16 Recorded - 3:22, 51:16, 54:14 Recorder - 3:3, 28:1, 73:2 Recordings - 11:11, 20:16, 26:23, 27:6, 28:4 Recover - 11:7, 11:11 Red - 31:18, 57:2 Register - 50:1, 54:13 Regulations - 49:5, 49:7 Released - 39:21, 39:23, 39:24, 39:25 Relieve - 62:20 Relieved - 61:15, 61:19, 62:1, 62:10, 62:15, 62:24, 64:24 Relieving - 62:16 Religion - 66:12 Religious - 66:14 Removed - 71:8 Replace - 29:12, 29:19 Replaced - 28:23, 29:15, 29:22 Replacing - 29:5 Request - 41:11, 44:18, 44:19, 47:17 Requested - 4:21, 40:19 Requesting - 47:20 Require - 49:7 Required - 61:20 Requirement - 50:1 8, 64:21 Requires - 49:14 Respond - 57:20, 57:23, 58:10, 58:15, 58:18, 58:23, 61:20, 61:23, 62:4, 64:22, 64:25 Responded - 60:11 Responding - 11:17 , 60:19 Responds - 57:10 Restroom - 63:25, 64:1 Retrieve - 11:21 Return - 72:21 Reviewing - 8:1, 11:6, 32:18 Rewind - 8:10, 8:17, 8:18, 9:9, 9:11, 9:12, 10:9, 35:3, 35:4 Rewinding - 33:4 Reyes - 66:3 Ring - 59:2 Risk - 38:18 Road - 10:24 Role - 39:18 Room - 3:18, 11:18, 21:18, 21:21, 21:24, 22:22, 23:6 Roster - 65:21, 65:22 Rosters - 68:5, 68:6 Run - 54:15, 55:3, 59:10 Running - 20:3, 20:24, 64:8, 64:10 Cs) Safety - 49:13, 51:17 Sally - 35:19 Saturday - 12:8, 12:11, 13:4, 13:18, 65:12 Saw - 23:23 Scene - 71:9 Screen - 19:11, 57:12, 64:7, 64:20 Screens - 26:6 SDNY - 67:10 Searching - 8:12 Second - 15:1, 26:17, 26:23 Seconds - 59:3, 59:7 Secure - 49:21 Security - 5:5, 49:11, 49:13 See - 8:4, 8:20, 10:6, 19:24, 24:9, 24:11, 24:13, 29:11, 39:18, 39:22, 57:12, 64:8, 64:18, 66:5, 70:25, 71:16 Seeing - 13:21, 13:25, 24:15, 27:21 Seen - 15:19, 24:7, 34:24, 67:12, 67:18, 67:21, 68:2, 68:3, 68:5, 69:21, 71:1 Sentenced - 37:2, 37:6, 38:22 Separate - 27:5, 46:14, 56:2 Services - 49:25 Set - 47:7, 47:24, 49:22, 64:5, 64:6, 68:24 Seven - 50:6 Several - 10:5 Share - 71:23 Shift - 62:1 Shop - 27:11, 40:13, 54:17 Show - 42:23 Showed - 45:11, 53:16 Showing - 65:8, 69:1 SHU - 43:11, 44:21, 48:25, 55:17, 56:14, 56:16, 65:15, 65:18, 65:21, 65:22, 70:14, 70:18 Sign - 5:19, 5:25, 6:3, 46:6, 47:11, 47:15, 48:4 Signature - 5:20, 6:1, 68:14 Signed - 48:15 SIS - 8:6, 11:1, 22:18, 27:17, 49:25, 50:4 Sitting - 62:12 Situation - 7:18, 52:4, 52:5, 55:5 Situations - 22:21, 26:20 Sound - 63:7, 65:2 Sounds - 18:19 South - 11:8, 35:16, 35:18, 36:1, 36:2, 39:7 Sp - 11:4, 39:11 Special - 3:1, 3:4, 3:19, 3:22, 3:25, 4:2, 15:20, 15:23, 37:10, 37:12, 42:17, 42:20, 49:25, 55:20, 56:17, 57:18, 60:16, 72:25 Specific - 22:20, 41:12, 43:22, 58:19 Spell - 3:24 Spoken - 28:2, 33:15, 34:20 Staff - 49:23 Stairs - 59:10 Standard - 50:12 Standing - 52:25 Start - 3:24, 19:19, 41:19, 42:2, 59:23 Started - 16:6, 16:9, 16:22, 17:2, 17:5, 17:9, 18:7, 18:19 Starting - 6:9 State - 43:2 Statement - 5:10, 5:15, 15:10 Station - 42:25 Stay - 14:15, 23:3 Stayed - 9:19, 10:5 Staying - 15:18 Stopped - 8:12 Stopping - 73:2 Suicide - 70:23 Supervising - 57:22 Supervisor - 57:24 Supposed - 38:19, 57:19, 58:7, 58:10, 58:14 Surrounded - 52:6 Surrounding - 4:11 Suspected - 39:10 Swear - 6:14 Taking - 6:25, 72:5 Target - 30:17 Team - 47:20, 47:21, 48:7, 48:22, 49:2, 50:22, 50:23 Tech - 8:15, 44:20 Technician - 7:18, 11:16 Telephone - 43:10, 46:6, 49:10, 49:14, 49:15, 49:18, 49:20, 49:23, 50:5, 54:16 Therefore - 11:15 There's - 51:19, 69:4 These - 3:7, 4:4, 23:22, 34:1, 37:4, 37:9, 38:22, 45:5, 45:6, 45:11, 67:13, 67:19, 67:24, 69:5, 69:7, 69:11, 69:12 They're - 27:20, 36:16, 37:6, 38:19, 46:5, 55:5, 56:22, 57:25, 59:7, 62:12 They've - 61:19, 61:25 EFTA00117343

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Third - 11:18 - 55:4 Threat - 51:20 Threats - 5:16 Three - 58:24, 59:5, 59:22, 64:20 Thursday - 13:5, 13:19 Tier - 55:5, 66:1 GR - 3:11, 3:21, 4:7 Timeframe - 25:21 Timeframes - 55:2 Times - 23:2, 27:2, 28:8, 49:17 Timestamp - 40:9 Today - 3:2, 7:1, 16:4, 16:18, 18:18, 18:25, 19:2 Today's - 3:14 Took - 70:12 Top - 10:22, 41:8 Touched - 72:2 Tough - 67:6 Tova - 54:8, 55:4 Town - 38:10 Track - 39:23, 60:10 Transfer - 67:2, 67:9, 67:15, 67:21, 68:6, 68:9 Transferred - 67:25, 68:10 Transpires - 57:8, 60:1, 60:6 Trial - 36:24, 36:25, 37:1, 38:3 Truth - 6:15 Turn - 10:17, 62:15 Turned - 40:18 Tvs - 64:7, 64:20 Two - 26:20, 29:25, 30:1, 35:22, 58:24, 59:4, 59:22, 68:21, 69:4 a Unable - 11:10 Unfortunately - 30: 20, 69:3 United - 4:18, 10:22, 67:1, 67:5 Units - 10:6, 26:10, 26:15, 30:25, 31:2, 31:3, 33:10, 36:8, 42:18, 67:24 UNKNOWN - 15:2, 15:7 Unmonitored - 51:1 8 Used - 5:10, 5:18, 27:15 Uses - 27:17 Using - 32:14, 63:13, 63:24 USMS - 67:10 Cv) Vaguely - 46:23 Verify - 47:22 Via - 11:16, 49:25 Video - 9:11, 11:7, 11:21, 17:20, 18:2, 18:5, 27:19, 35:1, 35:4, 39:7 Videoing - 24:9 View - 26:22, 27:7 Voluntarily - 4:13 Voluntary - 4:14, 4:21, 5:6 Cw) WAB - 67:9 Wait - 28:10 Waiver - 5:13 Warden - 8:7, 34:4, 34:5, 49:8, 67:4 Warden's - 3:18 Warehouse - 38:12 Warnings - 4:20, 5:13 Wasn't - 12:14, 12:15, 13:18, 25:2, 50:22 Watch - 39:6, 39:7 Weekly - 61:6 Welcome - 72:24 We'll - 7:2, 45:4 We're - 15:4, 23:24, 27:21, 30:23, 39:17, 40:10, 47:8, 47:24, 48:14, 54:4, 62:17 Weren't - 21:4, 24:1, 30:1, 30:3, 30:13, 30:14, 31:4, 31:5, 31:24 We've - 23:25 What's - 64:9, 70:25 Wheels - 70:8, 70:13 White - 69:2, 69:25 Whole - 31:15, 32:1, 56:11 Who's - 27:21, 65:23 Will - 3:21, 4:14, 5:8, 6:3, 6:22, 8:19, 12:6, 15:15, 16:2, 27:15, 30:16, 41:18, 47:21, 47:25, 54:17, 57:16, 59:21 Willing - 5:14 Witness - 6:3, 44:11, 52:17 Won't - 8:18 Word - 43:12 Words - 18:22, 18:24, 32:15 Work - 11:23, 14:25, 36:19, 36:20, 37:14, 37:15, 38:2, 38:10, 64:16 Working - 7:10, 15:21, 23:4, 26:18, 26:21, 26:24, 27:2, 27:6, 27:25, 61:18, 62:24 Works - 31:17 Wouldn't - 13:14, 37:12, 40:25, 41:1, 43:24, 45:1 Writing - 11:25 Written - 10:21, 13:3 Wrote - 12:6, 12:21, 12:22, 12:23, 13:10 Yesterday - 16:4, 16:7, 17:21, 18:4, 18:7, 18:18, 18:20, 18:23, 18:25, 20:14 York - 3:6, 3:18, 8:7, 10:24, 10:25, 27:10, 36:9, 36:12, 36:23, 37:8, 64:5, 67:2, 67:5 You'll - 63:21, 63:23 You've - 24:7, 64:24, 67:12, 67:18 Yup - 65:6 a 00:07:26 - 11:4 00:28:00 - 39:12 00:50:39 - 68:18 00:51:24 - 69:17 a 1:00 - 25:8 10:00 - 47:25 10:48 - 73:1 104 - 40:9 12:00 - 25:8, 25:20, 25:21 150 - 10:24 16th - 3:2, 3:14 18:58:03 - 42:2 19:19 - 42:9 1978 - 5:2 C2) 2:00 - 25:21 20 - 42:13 2019 - 7:6, 7:8, 10:25, 11:5, 11:22, 40:9, 41:22, 41:23, 42:1, 43:5, 43:11, 44:8, 65:11, 65:12, 67:4 2022 - 3:14 21 - 42:12 220 - 66:1 226/2 - 4:18 a | 3/16/22 - 45:18 3:45 - 11:5 a 4:00 - 11:17 408 - 45:21, 45:22, 45:23, 46:8, 47:12, 48:9 Cs) §:00 - 25:15 a | 6:00 - 61:15 6:33 - 61:16 6:58 - 42:3, 42:8 6:58:22 - 42:5 6th - 35:10 7:00 - 43:5 7:15 - 60:16 7:20 - 60:21, 60:22 7:59 - 42:9 7th - 35:10 8th - 7:10, 7:11, 11:5, 12:21, 12:24, 14:17, 14:20, 15:17, 16:3, 19:13, 19:14, 23:15, 24:21, 24:25, 25:1, 29:24, 35:2, 35:8 a 9:00 - 40:9 9:55 - 3:3 9:56 - 3:15 9:59 - 6:6, 6:7 EFTA00117344