Attorney General William Barr said Wednesday that he has seen no evidence to contradict the determination that Jeffrey Epstein died of suicide by hanging — despite “irregularities” at the jail where the pedophile died.

“We have found serious irregularities at the center, but at the same time I have seen nothing that undercuts the finding of the medical examiner that this was a suicide,” Barr told reporters at a roundtable event in Dallas, referring to the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, according to CNBC.

Barr added that he has “every confidence” that Kathy Hawk Sawyer, his new hand-picked director of the Bureau of Prisons, will “be able to address any management or operational deficiencies at the bureau.”

On Aug. 10, guards found the 66-year-old multimillionaire financier unresponsive in his cell, where he was awaiting trial on federal child sex-trafficking charges.

In the days after Epstein’s death, it surfaced that he had been moved off suicide watch and not checked on every 30 minutes as required. One of the guards supposedly keeping watch over him wasn’t even a full-fledged corrections officer, sources have said.

Barr said Wednesday that the investigations by the Justice Department, FBI and the Inspector General into the jail are “well along.”

But “unfortunately, there have been some delays because a number of the witnesses were not cooperative,” he said.

“A number of them required having union representatives and lawyers before we could schedule interviews. However, we are moving expeditiously and I think soon I will be in a position to report to Congress and the public the results,” Barr added.

He said he expected that he will “soon” be able to provide initial results of the probes to Congress, as well as to the general public.

Last week, Barr said he was “appalled” to hear that Epstein — a former friend of President Trump and former President Bill Clinton — had died while incarcerated.

His death came less than three weeks after he was found in his cell with marks around his neck, which sparked a wave of conspiracy theories about a possible cover-up.