Few Americans believe the official story that Jeffrey Epstein killed himself.

The government claimed a smoking gun proved the official story.

And the Epstein suicide note contained one strange thing that left everyone shaking their head.

As Swamp Digest reports:

The known evidence contradicts the government’s claim that Epstein killed himself in his Manhattan jail cell.

An investigation claimed Epstein killed himself “with a homemade noose around his neck.”

Despite the government asserting that Epstein strangled himself with a noose, there was no noose found on Epstein when prison officials discovered his body.

The government claimed no one entered Epstein’s cell block the night he died.

CBS analysis of prison security camera footage showed an orange shape moving up the stairs into Epstein’s cell block during the time frame Epstein died, which was most likely another inmate.

The FBI record of the prison guard who was the colleague of the guard who found Epstein’s body began Googling about Epstein’s death 40 minutes before the other guard stumbled upon Epstein’s corpse.

“Noel googled ‘latest on Epstein in jail” at 5:42 a.m. and then again at 5:52 a.m. — less than 40 minutes before her colleague, correctional officer Michael Thomas, found the disgraced financier dead in his cell by hanging at 6:30 a.m., according to an FBI record of Noel’s internet search history that night,” the New York Post reported.

The prison guard also had several suspicious deposits in their bank account, with the final one coming days before Epstein’s death.

“A total of 12 deposits began in April 2018, the bank said, and culminated in the largest deposit, for $5,000, on July 30, 2019, the records showed,” the Post report continued.

With the official story crumbling, the FBI now claims it’s had Epstein’s suicide note in its possession for the last seven years.

“They investigated me for a month — FOUND NOTHING!!!” the note read. “So, 15-year-old charges resulted.”

“It is a treat to be able to choose one’s time to say goodbye,” the note read. “Watcha want me to do — Bust out cryin!!”

The phrase “Bust out cryin” is from the 1960s TV show The Little Rascals.

Epstein’s brother Mark says this obscure reference proves nothing since the phrase appeared regularly in Epstein’s emails, which were made public months before the government made the suicide note public.

“Who didn’t watch ‘The Little Rascals’ in the ’60s when we were kids?” Mark Epstein told Business Insider. “I mean, everybody watched that.”

A forger, including an obscure detail like a reference to a decades-old TV show, would add authenticity and throw investigators off the scent.

“It wouldn’t be hard to get some pro forger to forge a note,” Mark Epstein added. “That’s the easiest ****ing thing in the world to do.”

Mark Epstein contended that the files were already public, and so a forger could easily have scanned Epstein’s emails and picked details to include in a supposed suicide note to make it look real.

Nicholas Tartaglione, Epstein’s cellmate, discovered the note after Epstein’s first supposed suicide attempt in July 2018.

Business Insider reported that Tartaglione “said Epstein left the note in a book when he was transferred to a different cell following the July 23 suicide attempt, while he was awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges.”

Epstein originally said Tartaglione attacked him, but later recanted.

Mark said this was because his brother knew that being tagged with the reputation of a snitch in prison could prove deadly.

A suspiciously crafted suicide note that magically appears seven years later, after evidence emerges showing Epstein may have been murdered, isn’t going to put questions about Epstein’s death to bed.

It’s just going to create more.