Bombshell: James Comey's NY Prosecutor Daughter Offered Epstein Freedom if He Would Implicate Trump in Sex Crimes, Cellmate Claims

A shocking new allegation suggests that the late disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein may have been offered a deal to undermine President Donald J. Trump during his first term — and that the offer came from someone deeply tied to the anti-Trump intelligence apparatus.

According to a Wednesday report, former police officer Nicholas Tartaglione — Epstein’s cellmate at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan in 2019 — claimed that prosecutors pressured Epstein to implicate then-President Trump in criminal activity in exchange for leniency. The lead prosecutor allegedly involved in making this offer was Maurene Comey, daughter of former FBI Director James Comey.

James Comey, of course, was fired by President Trump in May 2017. Following his removal, he emerged as a central figure pushing the baseless Russiagate conspiracy, which attempted to portray President Trump as compromised by foreign interests — a narrative that has long since collapsed under scrutiny.

Tartaglione is currently serving four consecutive life sentences for the kidnapping and murder of four men tied to a drug conspiracy. In a July pardon application, he claimed that Epstein confided in him during the month they shared a cell, before Epstein’s highly controversial death.

“Prosecutors … told Epstein that if he said President Trump was involved with Esptein’s crimes he would walk free,” Tartaglione claimed.

According to Tartaglione’s filing, Epstein told him that lead prosecutor Maurene Comey had said “he didn’t have to prove anything, as long as President Trump’s people could not disprove it.”

He further alleged that Comey claimed the FBI were “her people, not [President Trump’s],” a remarkable insight into how entrenched bureaucratic actors viewed their power during the President’s first term.

The filing also makes clear that Epstein did not link President Trump to his criminal conduct. Instead, Epstein allegedly stated outright that “President Trump was not involved in Epstein’s crimes.”

Epstein died on Aug. 10, 2019, in what was officially labeled a suicide — a conclusion still widely challenged by members of the public, lawmakers, and medical experts. Many have long suspected that Epstein’s death was engineered to prevent him from exposing powerful political, financial, and intelligence-connected figures.

Tartaglione himself claims he has faced repeated attempts on his life since Epstein’s death.

The allegation emerges at the same time congressional Democrats are suddenly demanding the immediate release of unredacted Epstein case documents — while President Trump has already called for full transparency.

“I have asked the Justice Department to release all Grand Jury testimony with respect to Jeffrey Epstein, subject only to Court Approval,” President Trump wrote in July.

However, some lawmakers have raised alarms that HR 4405 — the bill seeking to force unredacted publication — could expose the identities of individuals who had only peripheral, non-criminal associations with Epstein, creating a new legal and political firestorm.

What remains undeniable is this: Epstein was a man who moved in elite circles. The question now is who might have had the most to lose if he ever talked — and who may have worked hardest to ensure he never did.

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