Jeffrey Epstein allegedly bought a second private island in the Caribbean using an unaware Dubai businessman as a front man to disguise his identity, The Miami Herald has reported.
Great Saint James, a 165-acre island in the United States Virgin Islands that neighbors Epstein’s “pedophile island” Small Saint James, was sold for $22.5 million to an offshore company, Great St. Jim LLC, in 2016.
According to the newspaper report, the late financier secretly acquired the island after registering the company under the name of Dubai businessman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem.
Sulayem, the chairman of port operator DP World, was allegedly unaware of the purchase.
The latter told the Herald that Epstein had asked to use his name in an unspecified business but that he never gave his consent. Epstein appeared to have conducted the purchase regardless.
Epstein wanted to acquire the island but its former owner, Danish millionaire Christian Kjaer, refused to sell due to Epstein’s reputation as a sex offender.
Therefore, the financier allegedly decided to incorporate the shell company using Sulayem’s name.
Epstein’s ownership of the island was only revealed after the deal was completed and it wasn’t until Epstein was arrested in July this year that he was forced to officially declare ownership through a court affidavit.
Little Saint James, the first private island owned by Epstein for more than 20 years, was allegedly the place were the financier abused of many of his underage victims.
The financier acquired the island, dubbed “pedophile island” or “orgy island” by locals, for $7.95 million in 1998 using another offshore vehicle, L.S.J. LLC.
Epstein’s web of shell companies was previously revealed by the Paradise Papers. Because of the use of such opaque structures, assessing the exact wealth of the financier has been a difficult task.
Forbes has never included Epstein in its Billionaires list as there is little evidence that his fortune reached the $2.1 billion threshold.