
In the immediate aftermath of Jeffrey Epstein’s death inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center, the warden overseeing the facility, Lamine N’Diaye, was not publicly removed in any dramatic or disciplinary fashion. Instead, he was quietly reassigned to another Bureau of Prisons position, a move that drew little attention at the time despite the global scrutiny surrounding the circumstances of Epstein’s death. The transfer came as multiple internal failures at MCC were being exposed—from staffing shortages to broken surveillance systems—yet the leadership change itself was handled with minimal transparency, raising questions about whether accountability was being deliberately softened behind the scenes.Not long after that reassignment, N’Diaye retired from the Bureau of Prisons altogether, effectively closing the door on any deeper examination of his role in overseeing a facility where one of the most high-profile detainees in federal custody died under controversial conditions. The sequence—quiet transfer followed by a relatively swift retirement—has been viewed by critics as emblematic of a broader pattern in the Epstein case, where consequences for institutional leadership appeared limited or delayed, even as lower-level staff faced charges and public scrutiny.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
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