House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) has called upon a former Metropolitan Correctional Center guard to appear for an interview. The guard worked the day Jeffrey Epstein died.
In a letter to Tova Noel, Comer wrote that the Committee is reviewing the “alleged mismanagement” of the government’s investigation Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell, the “circumstances and subsequent investigations” Epstein’s death,” the “operation of sex-trafficking rings and ways for the federal government to effectively combat them,” ways Epstein and Maxwell “sought to curry favor and exercise influence to protect their illegal activities,” and any potential violations of “ethics rules related to elected officials.”
Documents released by the Department of Justice and obtained by the Committee suggest that Novel has information pertinent to the investigation, Comer noted, urging her to testify on March 26.
Speaking to Fox News’ Jesse Watters earlier this week, Comer said that a suspicious activity report flagged a “$5,000 mysterious deposit,” a concerning matter given that it is “very seldom” that reports are made for “sums less than $10,000.”
“That’s a mystery there, and that’s something that, according to the DOJ documents, they never looked into — never asked her about,” Comer explained. “Because of this, because of the media reports, and because of the fact that, honestly, most people on the committee aren’t confident 100% that Epstein’s death was a suicide, we’re going to ask Ms. Noel to come in for a transcribed interview.”
A bombshell DOJ/FBI memo released on July 7 asserts that Epstein took his own life in August 2019.





