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szdaily -> World -> 
Prisons’ chief replaced after Epstein death
    2019-08-21  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr announced the replacement of the head of federal prisons Monday in the wake of the shock jail-cell suicide of Jeffrey Epstein as he faced child sex trafficking charges.

Barr said he was appointing Kathleen Hawk Sawyer as director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, replacing Hugh Hurwitz who served as acting director for the past 15 months.

Hawk Sawyer, a veteran prison psychologist, has served as the director of the bureau before: She was appointed to the position in 1992 by Barr, who was attorney general at the time, and held the job until 2003.

Her appointment comes nine days after Epstein, a financier who circulated in powerful political circles, killed himself in the New York Metropolitan Correctional Center while he was supposedly under close monitoring following an earlier suicide attempt.

Epstein signed a will two days before his death, according to The New York Post, which obtained the document.

The will was dated Aug. 8 — two days before Epstein was found dead by suicide in a federal jail in New York — according to the newspaper.

Court papers list assets of about US$577 million. Court papers indicate Epstein’s brother, Mark, is the only heir.

Among the assets, the will lists more than US$56 million in cash and another $14 million in fixed income investments.

Epstein, 66, had been charged with sex trafficking of minors, a case that grew out of reports that he had been treated extremely lightly when he was arrested in Florida in 2006 for sex acts with underage girls.

In that case, he ultimately pleaded guilty to a state charge of soliciting prostitution with a minor and was sentenced to 18 months in jail — most of which was spent outside the prison on a work-release program.

His suicide on Aug. 10 sparked outrage that he was again escaping justice, and his friendships over the years with influential people such as President Donald Trump and former President Bill Clinton fueled numerous conspiracy theories.

But a New York coroner ruled that Epstein hung himself in his cell.  (SD-Agencies)

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