Rep. Nydia Velázquez on Wednesday joined the growing number of officials calling for a soup-to-nuts investigation into the apparent suicide of accused child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein in the federal Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan.

Velázquez said she wrote a letter to the Justice Department’s inspector general and the head of the FBI demanding answers not only about Epstein’s death but about what she called other rampant abuses of detainees at the lockup.

“I write to voice concerns about the continued alleged culture of mismanagement and inadequate leadership at this facility,” she said.

The circumstances surrounding the recent suicide of Epstein while he was in federal custody should shine a light on other problems that have been previously documented at the jail, said Velázquez, whose district includes parts of Brooklyn, Queens and Manhattan, including the MCC.

She cited several other incidents at the federal pen in which staffers allegedly abused detainees, including:

• Veteran Corrections Officer Edward Mulroney, who was sentenced to 28 months behind bars in 2005 after he pleaded guilty to violating the civil rights of Julio Arciniegas , whose eye socket and cheekbone were shattered in an August 2003 assault at the MCC.

• Navy vet and CO Rudell Clark Mullings was sentenced to seven years behind bars in 2016 for raping a female inmate on Valentine’s Day the year before.

• CO Colin Akparanta of New Jersey was charged in May with sexually assaulting four female inmates for more than five years at the MCC, abusing them in exchange for personal hygiene products, food and other gifts.

• An attempted cover-up by MCC brass of the fatal beating of inmate Roberto Grant — by falsely blaming his May 2015 death on a drug overdose , according to a $20 million lawsuit filed in 2017.

The New York lawmaker said she assumed Epstein’s high-profile death would be thoroughly investigated, but also wanted assurances that the other abuses would not be swept under the rug.

“Given his notoriety, I understand that your respective agencies will investigate the events leading to the death of Mr. Epstein. This review is wholly appropriate, and I thank you for conducting it,” she wrote. “However, I urge you to expand the scope of your inquiry to scrutinize the current professional culture at this facility.”

President Trump has called for a thorough probe into Epstein’s death, and Attorney General William Barr has directed the Department of Justice to find out what happened.

Epstein was found unresponsive in his cell about 6:30 a.m. Saturday — after guards who were supposed to be watching him fell asleep.

Authorities have called his death an apparent suicide.