When Jeffrey Epstein died in 2019, most observers assumed the criminal accountability story was over. Federal prosecutors had a defendant in custody and then didn’t. What few expected was that a small territorial government โ the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Epstein owned Little St. James โ would mount one of the most aggressive civil cases against his estate and the financial institutions that enabled him.
The territory’s attorney general filed suit in 2020 alleging Epstein used USVI as a base for trafficking and that his network defrauded the islands’ economic incentive programs. The case produced settlements, document discovery, and a paper trail that other plaintiffs are still mining.
A jurisdiction with unusual leverage
USVI had something most plaintiffs lacked: territorial sovereignty over the place where much of the conduct happened. Epstein’s private island sat within USVI waters. He had benefited from the territory’s Economic Development Commission tax incentives, which carry compliance obligations. That gave the AG’s office statutory hooks โ racketeering, trafficking, fraud against the EDC โ that private plaintiffs couldn’t easily assert. The territory could also subpoena local records, flight logs, and corporate filings that had been opaque for years. It was an unusual alignment: a small jurisdiction with direct authority over the physical sites where the alleged crimes occurred.
The JPMorgan settlement and what it revealed
In 2023, JPMorgan Chase agreed to pay USVI $75 million to settle claims that the bank knowingly facilitated Epstein’s trafficking by maintaining his accounts long after internal compliance flags. The settlement followed an earlier $290 million deal between JPMorgan and Epstein’s victims directly. Court filings in the USVI case unearthed internal bank communications, executive depositions, and details about who at the bank knew what and when. Whether or not you find the bank’s defenses persuasive, the documents themselves changed the public record. Without USVI’s litigation pressure, much of that material would likely have stayed sealed.
The estate settlement and document releases
USVI also reached a settlement with Epstein’s estate exceeding $100 million, plus the surrender of Little St. James. Subsequent court orders unsealed batches of documents containing names of associates, flight manifests, and deposition excerpts. Coverage of those releases sometimes outran what the documents actually proved โ being named in a deposition is not the same as being accused of a crime โ but the disclosures gave journalists and other litigants raw material that had been bottled up for a decade. The releases also strengthened civil claims by other survivors against banks, business partners, and estate beneficiaries.
What the case accomplished and what it didn’t
The lawsuit didn’t deliver criminal accountability for living co-conspirators โ that’s not what civil litigation does. What it did accomplish was substantial: financial recovery for victims, the forced disclosure of bank records, and a public record that makes future denials harder. It also demonstrated that a small jurisdiction with the right statutory tools can extract more from powerful defendants than federal authorities sometimes manage.
The takeaway
The USVI case is a reminder that civil litigation, properly resourced, can fill gaps left by criminal enforcement. The territory turned its narrow geographic claim into one of the most consequential post-Epstein legal actions on record.
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