The mayor said in an interview that he did not understand how Epstein, who was facing multiple accusations of sexual abuse and sex trafficking and who had only recently been taken off suicide watch, was left unsupervised long enough in the federal jail in Manhattan so that he was in a position to end his own life.
âItâs just too convenient,â de Blasio said. âItâs too many pieces happening simultaneously that donât fit.â
Epsteinâs death has led to an explosion of unfounded conspiracy theories on social media, often uniting people of disparate ideologies who seem to be grasping for any kind of explanation for how it could have happened.
Unusually, professionals in politics, media and the academic world have joined in the speculation.
Epstein, a financier, had cultivated relationships over the years with luminaries in politics, business, academia, science and fashion.
De Blasio noted that Epstein âhad information potentially related to some of the wealthiest and most powerful people in the country.â
âItâs just not a believable situation that there wouldnât be an intense and careful effort to watch him,â de Blasio said.
He added: âA lot of times, folks fall into conspiracy theories that instantly fall apart and sound extreme. But in this case, the facts themselves donât make sense on their face.â
Like other officials, the mayor called for a full and independent investigation into Epsteinâs death and said that he hoped law enforcement would continue to pursue justice for Epsteinâs alleged victims.
Other prominent figures including Joe Scarborough of MSNBCâs âMorning Joe,â Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, and Laurence Tribe, a Harvard law professor, on Monday all said that they did not need to wait for an official investigation to assert that something did not add up.
President Donald Trump, who has often shared unfounded conspiracy theories, has contributed to the frenzy, retweeting a baseless one about Epstein and the Clintons.
Epstein was found dead Saturday morning after he had apparently hanged himself, just two weeks after he had been taken off suicide watch at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Lower Manhattan, officials said.
The jail is run by the federal Bureau of Prisons, so de Blasio does not have jurisdiction over it. The U.S. attorney general, William Barr, said Monday that there had been âserious irregularitiesâ at the jail, and that the FBI is investigating what happened.
On Twitter, Scarborough said that Epstein had information that âwould have destroyed rich and powerfulâ menâs lives and his death was âpredictably Russian.â
In an interview Monday, Scarborough called his own comment glib, but would not characterize it as a conspiracy theory.
âWhat observer of news doesnât think that Epstein being left alone in a cell was not a bizarre choice for somebody to make?â he asked. âIt sounds like something that you read in the past about mob informants, who were under heavy guard but still somehow managed to find a way to kill themselves so they didnât have to testify.â
Other politicians insisted that what they had learned so far made little sense.
âThe suicide of Mr. Epstein is an impossibility,â Green said on Twitter, calling for a congressional investigation of the death. âWhen an impossibility occurs involving powerful people and possible criminality there must be an investigation to end speculation.â
In an interview Monday, Green said that he had been referring to the allegations against the financier and that he did not mean to suggest that Epsteinâs death had involved powerful people and possible criminality. He repeated his call for an official investigation.
âI am not a person who has a conspiracy theory about this,â he said. âI donât have such a theory. I just know that where there are few facts, there is much speculation and it is our duty to minimize the speculation by presenting the facts to the nation.â
Tribe, who teaches constitutional law at Harvard and who has a social media following of more than half a million people, said on Twitter on Saturday that âyou donât have to be a conspiracy theorist to see an evil cover-up to protect lots of powerful men here.â
Asked to elaborate in an interview Monday, the professor said that while he had no particular theory of what had happened to Epstein, he suspected that there was more than an âaccidental explanation.â
He added that it did not seem to go far enough to simply insist that Epsteinâs death be thoroughly investigated.
âWe are at a point where so many things are concerning that one has to raise the decibel level a little,â Tribe said. âIf people who are responsible and donât tend to be screamers donât do that, itâs too easy to dismiss those who do as the usual suspects.â
Raising the decibel level is something that is rewarded on social media. On Twitter, in particular, countless people are willing to fill an information void with opinions, assertions and baseless speculation.
âThe new social media has allowed conspiratorial accusations to multiply and flourish because the gatekeepers who used to decide what should be aired or printed have been bypassed,â said Russell Muirhead, a co-author of âA Lot of People Are Saying: The New Conspiracism and the Assault on Democracy.â
Muirhead said that he was concerned that the nature of social media might start to lead traditional gatekeepers to more regularly engage in spreading conspiracies, rather than in fighting them. He said that was a particular risk with stories like Epsteinâs, that really did call for more explanation.
âTo the extent that gatekeepers are following whatâs trending rather than examining whatâs trending with skepticism, then weâre really at risk of giving this new conspiracism even more force than it already has,â he said.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.