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McClatchy Washington Bureau
McClatchy Washington Bureau
National
Kevin G. Hall

Jeffrey Epstein estate sale: Executors unload $195,000 Bentley, Mercedes, other assets

WASHINGTON _ Executors winding down the estate of disgraced financier Jeffrey E. Epstein have raised more than $1 million through the sales of his assets and account liquidations.

In a delayed court filing that had been extended until last Friday lawyers for Epstein's estate showed that his net worth has increased by about $80 million since his death, and listed some of his pricey assets they've sold off.

These include several luxury cars, including a 2018 Bentley sold for $195,000 and a 2019 Mercedes-Benz for $133,000. They did not disclose the purchasers.

In all, the executors said slightly more than $1 million has been raised from asset sales and liquidating four accounts tied to shell companies.

The detailed accounting of Epstein's estate also showed that his principal banking for his day-to-day operations was done through two banks in nearby Puerto Rico _ Banco Popular and 1 First Bank.

Epstein's net worth at the time of his reported death by hanging last Aug. 10 was estimated at $550 million. In their first quarterly filing, executors of his estate now estimate the value of his total assets as of last Friday at about $634.8 million.

Executors also revised upward the value of his assets at time of death to more than $628 million. They said his cash on hand at the time of death was about $9.4 million and that following expenditures since then is now at about $7.6 million.

The revelations in court documents were made public Monday amid this week's expected probate hearing in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where the attorney general has put a lien on the Epstein estate in a bid to seize the two islands there he owned.

Lawyers for victims will go before a judge as well as executors of the estate to fight it out Tuesday over where certain claims will be settled and by whom.

Attorney General Denise George, a relative newcomer, recently filed a motion to intervene to give the local government a say in matters of estate settlement, on the grounds that some of Epstein's underage victims were abused locally.

In an indictment last month, she alleged that Epstein continued to bring underage women to his properties as recently as 2018, and at least as young as 12.

Epstein was arrested on federal sex trafficking charges last July, eight months after the Miami Herald published "Perversion of Justice," a series of stories examining the extraordinary plea deal 10 years earlier that absolved him of trafficking allegations.

The quarterly filing by executors listed three pages of potential or ongoing litigation, underscoring how complex it will be to settle Epstein's estate.

The executors _ longtime Epstein attorneys Darren K. Indyke and Richard D. Kahn, whom the Virgin Islands alleges in the motion to intervene were complicit _ have proposed a New York-based victims' compensation fund, to which the island's government has filed a motion in opposition.

The new report from executors listed a number of payments to utilities, banks and some small creditors. They also offered that there are $160,000 in outstanding checks for maintenance and upkeep at his properties in New Mexico and the U.S. Virgin Islands and more than $114,000 owed to a Bell Miami Inc. for helicopter repairs.

The estate paid $86,372 in cemetery and funeral home expenses for Epstein and $618,144 in pre-death credit card expenses and contributions to his foundation in the Virgin Islands that did business as Enhanced Education.

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