Unveiling the Missing Minute: New Revelations in Jeffrey Epstein's Surveillance Footage

A recently released congressional video has filled a one-minute gap in the surveillance footage from Jeffrey Epstein's jail unit on the night of his suicide in 2019. The House Oversight Committee shared two crucial clips that revealed the missing minute from the surveillance footage outside Epstein's cell block at the Metropolitan Correctional Center.
The disputed minute, which lasted from 11:58:59 on August 9, 2019, to midnight on August 10, 2019, has been a subject of contention. Digital forensics experts discovered that the clip released by the Department of Justice was edited from multiple video segments using Adobe Premiere Pro, sparking conspiracy theories about a cover-up.
The latest drop of files from the House committee shows that the camera data changed around midnight, necessitating the merging of the two clips to create a continuous video. Fox News Digital combined the clips to demonstrate that there was no interruption in the footage, contradicting previous explanations by Attorney General Pam Bondi that a minute of footage is deleted every night.
The reason for the missing footage remains unclear, but the minute that was initially absent did not capture any significant activity inside the jail block. Epstein was found to have committed suicide in his New York City jail cell while facing additional sex trafficking charges.
The attorney general's office has not provided immediate comments on the matter.