A corrections officer who was on duty when Jeffrey Epstein died in his New York City prison cell in August 2019 is set to testify before the House Oversight Committee on Monday.

Tova Noel told federal investigators that she believes she was the last person to see the convicted sex offender alive at the Metropolitan Correctional Center before he killed himself. Noel and Michael Thomas, the other corrections officer assigned to monitor Epstein that night, initially faced criminal charges for falsifying records related to that shift, but those were dropped after the pair reached deals with prosecutors in 2021. Both were fired from their jobs.

Noel’s and Thomas’ prosecution agreements included their cooperation with a government investigation into Epstein’s death. The DOJ’s inspector general released its report on that investigation in July 2023, finding “numerous and serious failures by MCC New York staff constituting misconduct and dereliction of their duties.”

Documents produced by the Justice Department reveal that FBI investigators probed Google searches by Noel the morning of Epstein’s death, including for “latest on Epstein in jail” less than an hour before he was found dead.

“I don’t remember doing that,” Noel said of the Google searches in her sworn statement to the DOJ in 2021.

Noel, now in her late 30s, apparently interacted with Epstein while he was in custody. A handwritten note found in Epstein’s cell and published by CBS News following his death indicated Noel gave Epstein “burnt food” and that another guard kept him locked in a shower stall for an hour. The note, written on yellow-lined paper with a blue ballpoint pen, also says, “NO FUN!!” a phrase echoed in a purported suicide note unsealed by a federal court earlier this month.

Noel’s Monday appearance before the House Oversight Committee will come about two months after the panel first requested her testimony. The committee most recently heard from Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who downplayed his visits to Epstein’s homes and denied any wrongdoing in relation to Epstein. Former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and billionaire Les Wexner also appeared before the committee earlier this year and denied having had knowledge of Epstein’s abuse at the time.

Former Epstein assistant Sarah Kellen is scheduled to testify before the Republican-led committee on Thursday. In the weeks to come, former Attorney General Pam Bondi; Epstein’s former longtime executive assistant, Lesley Groff; Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates; investor Leon Black; and former White House counsel to President Barack Obama Kathryn Ruemmler are all slated to appear before the committee.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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