The Department of Justice published what it referred to as “raw” surveillance video of Jeffrey Epstein’s cell on the evening he passed away, but fresh analysis indicates the video had been edited using commercial software. WIRED’s probe of the 11-hour video uncovered metadata that indicated the video had been edited using Adobe Premiere Pro, raising questions about the credibility of evidence intended to confirm the DOJ’s argument that nothing was amiss during the death of Epstein in August 2019.
The metadata reveals a great deal. Instead of being an immediate raw export from the surveillance system of the prison, the video itself seems to have been composed of at least two separate source clips.
The file was saved four times and exported prior to being uploaded to the DOJ website. Digital fingerprints reveal that the edits were performed using a Windows user account called “MJCOLE~1” on 23 May 2025, all within the timeframe of approximately 23 minutes.
Edited Epstein Video Sparks Questions
Digital forensics expert Hany Farid, who examined the data for WIRED, didn’t mince words describing what he found. “If a lawyer brought me this file and said, ‘Is this okay for court?’ I’d tell him no. Go back to the beginning. Do it properly,” Farid said.
His criticism recognizes a basic flaw in the evidence. In order to be legally admissible and credible, video evidence obtained through surveillance must bear an identifiable chain of custody. When video goes through editing software, it becomes virtually impossible to determine if the material has been edited.
Attorney General Pam Bondi recently employed this footage to maintain that nobody penetrated the area outside of Epstein’s cell during the pivotal overnight period. She admitted there was a one-minute gap around midnight, which she attributed to a routine daily reboot of the prison monitoring system.
But the DOJ has not provided a credible answer why the allegedly “raw” video needed to be rendered on Premiere Pro. When questioned about the disparity, officials have shifted the responsibility from the FBI to Bureau of Prisons, and none of them has given clear answers.
The technical problems with the video could not have come at a worse moment for public confidence. The death of Epstein has already spawned a host of conspiracy theories, and the revelation that central evidence had been transmitted through editing software will be likely to fan suspicion.
The Edited Truth: How Video Processing in Epstein’s Case Erodes Public Trust
Conspiracy researcher Mike Rothschild warned that this kind of vagueness only makes speculation worse. “Whatever your flavor of Epstein conspiracy is,” he told WIRED, “The video will help bolster it.”
Experts know the edit may be completely harmless. Transcoding video from closed formats, splicing pieces of different angles of different cameras, or compiling footage for distribution sometimes requires processing through editing software. Most surveillance systems employ formats requiring conversion before they can be easily shared or displayed.
But the failure to be open about how the necessity for these changes was created breeds unnecessary suspicion. When you’re dealing with evidence on a case of this magnitude, keeping public trust is about being open in all facets of the process.
This line raises questions about the processing of digital evidence in high-profile cases. With the more advanced technology employed nowadays, the distinction between legitimate processing and probable manipulation is vanishing.
The Epstein case has already been called into question over every aspect of the investigation, from the initial treatment of evidence to surveillance failures. The latest revelation that crucial video evidence was run through video editing software adds further depth to an already contentious case.
For the DOJ, this is a massive crisis of credibility. By releasing evidence intended to lay to rest conspiracy theories, the last thing officials would want to do is raise new questions about the credibility of that evidence.
The metadata findings do not confirm the video was improperly edited, but they do confirm the DOJ’s determination that the video was “raw” surveillance footage was incorrect. In the absence of transparency in how the editing was conducted, public distrust of the government’s version of events will continue.




