The judge overseeing the criminal case against late convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein wants to know if an investigation into the millionaire’s apparent suicide will include a probe into his prior injuries at the jail where he was found dead on Saturday.

“One open question, among others, is whether the investigations referenced in your letter will include the incident at the MCC involving Mr. Epstein on or about July 23, 2019,” Manhattan federal court judge Richard Berman wrote to Metropolitan Correctional Center warden Lamine N’Diaye on Monday, responding to a letter that N’Diaye sent Saturday alerting him Epstein had died.

“To my knowledge it has never been definitely explained what the BOP concluded about the incident.”

N’Diaye — who has since been reassigned pending an investigation — responded to the judge later Monday that he couldn’t reveal anything because of current investigations.

“I cannot divulge any information about the prior investigation at this time,” the warden wrote.

Epstein, 66, was found in on the floor of his cell, alive and in the fetal position with marks on his neck on July 23 — though authorities never said if they believed the marks had been caused by him or his cellmate, Nicholas Tartaglione.

Tartaglione, an ex-Westchester cop who faces the death penalty in a quadruple homicide upstate, claims he saved Epstein in that incident.

Epstein faced sex-trafficking charges for allegedly grooming a harem of underage girls to have sex with him and other powerful men.

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman has said his office is continuing its investigation into the case.