They could be destroying evidence of weaknesses in their security procedures, or evidence of strong security procedures that were not followed around the time of Epstein’s death. They could be destroying evidence that indicates who was around, who was responsible for his oversight, maintenance records for security cameras that “failed”, or any number of things. It could just be “we fucked up and the FBI are going to be looking into everything, so destroy everything that might suggest we’re incompetent.” Creating unclarity by destroying documents can hinder an investigation in many ways. It certainly merits attention.
Except that we have all those records. We know who was responsible for him, who was on duty, when the cameras were last supposed to be serviced, his medical records, his transfer records, the access records for the facility and his ward in particular, the list goes on. Shredded documents don’t take up that much space - to produce remarkably large amounts would require a ton of documents to be shredded, and I’m struggling to figure out what documents could be plausibly contributing to both that excess volume and at the same time be part of the coverup.
They could be destroying evidence of weaknesses in their security procedures, or evidence of strong security procedures that were not followed around the time of Epstein’s death. They could be destroying evidence that indicates who was around, who was responsible for his oversight, maintenance records for security cameras that “failed”, or any number of things. It could just be “we fucked up and the FBI are going to be looking into everything, so destroy everything that might suggest we’re incompetent.” Creating unclarity by destroying documents can hinder an investigation in many ways. It certainly merits attention.
Except that we have all those records. We know who was responsible for him, who was on duty, when the cameras were last supposed to be serviced, his medical records, his transfer records, the access records for the facility and his ward in particular, the list goes on. Shredded documents don’t take up that much space - to produce remarkably large amounts would require a ton of documents to be shredded, and I’m struggling to figure out what documents could be plausibly contributing to both that excess volume and at the same time be part of the coverup.