This article is more than 10 months old

This article is more than 10 months old

Conspiracy theories have abounded ever since Jeffrey Epstein’s death in a New York jail was ruled a suicide, with figures on the right and left claiming he was murdered. On Wednesday, a US congressman weighed in with his own cryptic message.

Republican Paul Gosar, a staunch conservative from Arizona, issued a series of 23 tweets over a roughly eight-hour period railing against the Democrats’ impeachment investigation of Donald Trump. Taken together, the first letter of each tweet spells: “EPSTEIN DIDN’T KILL HIMSELF”.

Medical examiner says Jeffrey Epstein's death was a suicide Read more

As the first public impeachment hearing got under way, it was unclear what prompted the timing of Gosar’s message. Asked whether it was intentional, his communications director, Ben Goldey, replied with an equally cryptic comment:

All of the tweets pertained to testimony from today’s hearing. Rest assured, they are substantive. Every one of them. All of them. 5 were brilliant. 1 was ok.



Zealous Twitter users picked up on the original message, which was easy to miss as it was couched in standard-issue rightwing complaints: “No quid pro quo”, “Democrats are desperate”, “Hillary Clinton and the DNC funded a foreign spy”. A few hours later, however, Gosar’s account posted Goldey’s comment with the first letter of each line bolded, making the message clear.

You’ll recall that Epstein was arrested and jailed over the summer on charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy related to the alleged abuse of hundreds of young girls. He died at the New York Metropolitan correctional center in August. His death was ruled a suicide following an autopsy. Conspiracy theorists on both ends of the political spectrum, however, have claimed he was killed because he knew too much about a network of powerful associates.