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The next Jeffrey Epstein drama: fighting over his mysterious estate

A Manhattan residence owned by Jeffrey Epstein, part of his complicated estate.
A residence belonging to Jeffrey Epstein on the Upper East Side of Manhattan on July 8.
(Kevin Hagen / Getty Images)
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With opulent homes, a Caribbean island and a private jet to Jeffrey Epstein’s name, the battle to claim his assets is on.

Even as questions swirl around the former asset manager’s death while in federal custody, attention will shift this week to the next drama: identifying what’s in his estate, who can claim his assets and which jurisdiction takes up the case. Lawyers seeking compensation for victims of his alleged sex crimes are calling for a freeze on the estate, raising the prospect of a legal process that could drag out for years.

It’s unclear whether Epstein, who wasn’t married and has no known children, left a will. What is known is that his wealth included a $77-million, 40-room mansion on New York’s Upper East Side, the island of Little St. James in the U.S. Virgin Islands, a ranch in New Mexico and homes in Paris and Palm Beach, Fla. His business was registered in the Virgin Islands.

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“It’s going to be incredibly complicated,” said David Ring, an attorney in Los Angeles who has represented victims of sexual abuse and assault. “It’s going to be a lot of different folks who are going to be battling over this estate and these assets, and I hope the victims come out on top. I think they deserve it. But I don’t think the estate is just going to hand it over to them.”

Epstein’s known relatives include his brother, Mark, a niece and a nephew, who live in New York.

Mark Epstein and a friend had offered to guarantee a bond as part of his brother’s bail request, which was denied.

Jeffrey Epstein was awaiting trial on federal charges of sexually trafficking girls when he died Saturday at 66 in an apparent suicide. Atty. Gen. William Barr vowed Monday to pursue justice for Epstein’s accusers and said the federal prison where Epstein died had “serious irregularities.”

Although the criminal case against Epstein closed with his death, lawyers have said that any victims may pursue civil lawsuits against his estate, a process that could take years and run up against laws barring claims that are too old. A decade ago, more than two dozen women reached confidential settlements with Epstein in Florida.

Investigators in the current case gathered more evidence when they searched Epstein’s New York townhouse after his July arrest, including photographs of what appeared to be naked underage girls.

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Attorney Lisa Bloom, who represents several women who say Epstein abused them, called on his estate’s administrators to freeze all of his assets.

“Give his entire estate to his victims,” Bloom said on Twitter. “It is the only justice they can get. And they deserve it. And on behalf of the Epstein victims I represent, I intend to fight for it.”

That will involve trying to establish the full scope of what prosecutors called Epstein’s “vast fortune,” which is more difficult now that he’s dead. Based on limited financial records, prosecutors estimated he made $10 million a year and had a net worth of at least $500 million.

But details of his assets remained “largely concealed” from the New York court, according to prosecutors, and the judge scolded Epstein’s lawyers for providing only a “cursory” one-page summary of his assets.

Where estate proceedings might play out depends partly on which of Epstein’s homes is considered his main one.

Documents submitted by his lawyers in a bail request after his arrest indicated his primary residence was his compound on the island of Little St. James in the U.S. Virgin Islands. But New York or Florida also appear to be good possibilities.

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In New York, primary residence is defined as “the county where the decedent lived and considered their primary home address before they died.” If a person had more than one home, it would be the place where they “intended to return.”

Wherever any will is filed, it would first go through the probate process, where a judge determines whether it’s a valid statement of what Epstein wanted to happen with his property after his death. Once the will is determined to be valid, the executor named by the decedent would be officially appointed to divide up their estate. It’s not clear whom Epstein designated.

The process would be overseen by the Superior Court in the Virgin Islands and the Surrogate’s Court in New York. In Florida, the will would have to be filed by the executor of the estate within 10 days of receiving notice of a death in a court in the county where the person lived.

To file the will, the executor would need the death certificate from New York City, which is filed by the chief medical examiner. Orders for death certificates can take as long as a month to process.

Prosecutors moved to seize Epstein’s assets including his New York mansion after his arrest, but they can no longer pursue that through criminal proceedings because the case against him has ended.

But they could still seek to seize individual assets through a civil forfeiture proceeding if they determine that the property was used to facilitate a crime or was the proceeds of criminal activity, said Sharon Cohen Levin, a former federal prosecutor who headed the Southern District of New York’s money laundering and asset forfeiture unit.

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They would have to file a complaint against an individual asset, such as the New York house, lay out the basis for the underlying crime and the evidence showing it was committed — similar to the indictment — and prove how that asset was used to facilitate the crime, Levin said. Unlike in a criminal case, prosecutors would only have to prove that the crime more than likely occurred, not that it was beyond a reasonable doubt.

“It could literally be the same case,” Levin said. “Maybe there are other people they might be charging. There might be other theories. But this is something I would assume they would be seriously considering.”

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