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New York City's Chief Medical Examiner's office is standing by its autopsy of convicted sex offender and accused sex trafficker, Jeffrey Epstein after a famed forensic pathologist alleged that they may have gotten it wrong.

EPSTEIN'S ATTORNEYS 'NOT SATISFIED' WITH AUTOPSY RESULTS THAT CONCLUDED FINANCIER DIED BY HANGING

On "Fox and Friends" on Wednesday, Dr. Michael Baden dropped a bombshell by saying that Epstein's autopsy is more consistent with homicidal strangulation than suicide.

New York City's Medical Examiner ruled shortly after Epstein's death that the cause was suicide by hanging.

MYSTERIOUS ORIGINS OF EPSTEIN'S ENORMOUS FORTUNE

On Wednesday, New York City Chief Medical Examiner, Dr. Barbara Sampson, responded to Dr. Baden's comments in a statement, saying, "Our investigation concluded that the cause of Mr. Epstein’s death was hanging and the manner of death was suicide. We stand by that determination. We continue to share information around the medical investigation with Mr. Epstein's family, their representatives, and their pathology consultant. The original medical investigation was thorough and complete.  There is no reason for a second medical investigation by our office."

In an exclusive interview with Fox News, veteran homicide detective and Fox Nation host, Mark Fuhrman said, "Baden actually opens up something that someone should have been answered several months ago."

Fuhrman said that while he continues to believe that Epstein killed himself inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center on August 10, he also believes that the facts of the case could be more definitively established by determining the time of Epstein's death.

"There are opportunities to narrow this down tighter and this hasn't been reported. I sure hope they opened his stomach," Furhman said in reference to the New York City medical examiner's autopsy.

"We know the exact time that he had his last meal.  You can analyze the stomach contents and rate of digestion to bracket the time of death between one or two hours," he told Fox News.

Fuhrman said that information is "scientifically important" because the time of death would allow investigators to determine whether or not anyone could have been in Epstein's cell at that time.

In Fox Nation's "The Fuhrman Diaries: Special Investigation," Furhman reconstructed a detailed timeline leading up to the apparent suicide.

"About two weeks after he was arrested, he attempted suicide," said Fuhrman in the Fox Nation special. "Obviously, it was unsuccessful and he was put under suicide watch. Now, suicide watch -- federally -- is you are watched constantly 24 hours a day. You have clothes and bedding that cannot be tied into a rope ... there's nothing that's available for you to actually take your own life and you're being watched all the time."

NEW YORK MEDICAL EXAMINER: JEFFREY EPSTEIN'S DEATH WAS A SUICIDE BY HANGING

Epstein, however, did not remain on suicide watch.

"Jeffrey Epstein convinced his attorney [and] convinced the chief psychologist at the correctional facility that he was no longer a threat to himself," continued Fuhrman. "The attorney pushed it. The warden agreed with it. So ... he was taken off suicide watch."

The inmate was moved to a 'special housing unit' inside the New York City facility, where a guard is supposed to monitor him through a cell door window, every 30 to 45 minutes.

Then, according to Fuhrman, Epstein makes a suspicious move.

"Two days before he actually takes his own life, he gets his attorney and he rewrites his will, leaving most of his assets to his brother... I hate to tell anybody what clues look like. But let's see. Two weeks prior, you try to commit suicide. You convinced the psychiatrist that's working for the correctional facility that you're OK. You call your attorney and you say, 'I need to redo my will.' Ladies and gentlemen, you're preparing to end your life or expecting somebody to end it for you."

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Speaking to Fox News, Fuhrman said that even though he still believes that Epstein committed suicide he does not find fault in Dr. Baden's analysis.

"If Baden and I were working on this case and he said, 'I can't rule out homicide' then I'd say 'thanks' as a detective because that gives me the latitude to investigate," he said.  "I can get subpoenas to investigate a homicide... when it is ruled a suicide then things start stopping because there is no criminality to investigate.  The criminal is the guy who killed himself."

To watch all of "Fuhrman Diaries: Special Investigation" go to Fox Nation and sign up today.

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