Little Saint James
Nickname: Epstein Island
Little Saint James is located in the U.S. Virgin Islands
Little Saint James
Little Saint James
Location in the Caribbean
Little Saint James is located in Caribbean
Little Saint James
Little Saint James
Little Saint James (Caribbean)
Geography
Location Caribbean Sea
Coordinates 18°18′0″N 64°49′31″W / 18.30000°N 64.82528°W / 18.30000; -64.82528
Type Volcanic
Archipelago Virgin Islands archipelago
Administration
United States
Territory United States Virgin Islands
Area covered 0.28–0.32 km2 (0.11–0.12 sq mi)

Little Saint James, infamously nicknamed Epstein Island, is a small private island in the United States Virgin Islands southeast of Saint Thomas. It was owned by American financier and convicted child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein from 1998 until his death in 2019.[1][2]

The island's reputation became controversial in 2015,[3] when Virginia Giuffre alleged in a lawsuit that as an 18 year old, she had an orgy with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and eight girls who "appeared to be under the age of 18" and didn't speak English.[3]

Geography

Little Saint James is a small island (or islet)[4] with an area of 70 to 78 acres (28 to 32 ha). It is part of the United States Virgin Islands,[1] southeast of neighboring Great Saint James, both off the southern coast of the larger St. Thomas island[5][6] and belonging to the subdistrict East End, St. Thomas. The Virgin Islands are mountain peaks rising from the Caribbean ocean floor.[7] The trade winds (prevailing east-to-west winds near Earth's equator) dominate its climate and local weather, with stronger winds and less rain during winter.[8]

History

Little St. James was part of the Danish West Indies. In 1917, Denmark sold the United States Virgin Islands to the United States. Little St. James was included as one of the "adjacent islands" in the deal.[9][10]

Little St. James is a private island. In 1997, it was owned by venture capitalist Arch Cummin and was for sale for $10.5 million.[11] In April 1998, a company called L.S.J. LLC purchased it for $7.95 million. Documents show that Jeffrey Epstein was the sole member of L.S.J.[12][13][14][15] In 2019, the island was valued at $63,874,223.[16] Little St. James was Epstein's primary residence,[5][17] and he called the island "Little St. Jeff".[1][2] The main house on the island was renovated by Edward Tuttle, a designer of the Aman Resorts.[1]

Before Epstein bought the Island, several buildings were already present, including the main house, the guest house, oval-shaped pool, and three cabanas. They were seen in the booklet promoting the island for sale and appeared in the March 1996 edition of House & Garden magazine and "The Villa Report".[18] In 2005, Epstein hired the Virgin Islands Water and Power Authority to install a combination power and fiber optic cable between St. Thomas and Little St. James, giving the island dedicated data and electric connections, which eliminated the need for generators.[19][20]

Little Saint James Island in the Virgin Islands, while owned by Jeffrey Epstein in June 2013

In 2008, Epstein's estate on Little St. James had 70 staff.[13][21] According to a former staffer, Epstein insisted on discretion and confidentiality from his employees.[15] In 2016, the Department of Planning and Natural Resources received complaints about Epstein, who had begun to clear land without a permit.[19] In his will and testament (a 21-page pour-over will), signed two days before his death,[22] all of Epstein's holdings were transferred into the "1953 [the year of his birth] Trust".[23]

In March 2022, Little St. James and the neighboring Great Saint James were listed at $125 million. A lawyer for Epstein's estate said money obtained from the sale would be used to settle lawsuits. Bespoke Real Estate, the agency jointly overseeing the sale, said that further information on the listing was available only to prospective buyers.[24][25]

In May 2023, billionaire Stephen Deckoff, under his firm SD Investments, announced the acquisition of Great St. James and Little St. James for $60 million.[26][27]

Epstein's buildings

Guest house and the main residence on the right

In 1997, the island had a main house, three guest cottages, a caretaker's cottage, a private desalination system, a helipad, and a dock.[11] By 2019, its infrastructure had expanded to include a sprawling complex of residential and maintenance buildings.

Main residence

Kitchen inside the Main Residence

Edward Tuttle's architecture practice designed the renovation of the main house, often called a compound.[28][29] The renovation concluded sometime after March 2003[1] and the colonnaded villa-style house is where guests stayed while visiting the island.[30] Besides the main residence, there are four additional residences.[31]

Epstein's cabana

The main office area in Epstein's Cabana

Epstein's personal residence on the island was a stone-walled cabana with a turquoise ceiling, one of many cabanas on the island.[30]

Guest cabanas

Guest cabanas

Four smaller single-story buildings are next to the Main Residence and a large pool. All four have blue roofs.[31]

Pool

The Recorder of Deeds had a lien for nearly $40,000 owed to Rex Wolterman for pool construction at the time of Epstein's death.[19]

Pool house

The pool house on the western end of the island

On the west end of the island is a pool with a single-story structure.[31]

Temple

Exterior

At the southwest point of the island is a blue-striped, boxlike building surrounded by an expansive square pavilion with geometric patterns meant to look like mosaics painted in red on a white background. The structure was initially topped by a golden dome, which Google Earth satellite images suggest was added between July 2013 and March 2014. Aerial footage from March 2015 shows the dome and two large, golden, avian-like statues atop the building with two sculptures in front.[32] Locals say the dome was blown away during Hurricane Maria in 2017.[33]

The purpose of the actual construction is unclear and it deviates in substantial ways from the plans for the grand piano container that Epstein's architects submitted for approval in 2010.[33] The planned "Music Pavilion" building was of an octagonal footprint. The planned building with a substantial covered porch, also octagonal, was much lower in perspective than the as-built. The constructed building was much taller, in the shape of a cube. The dome was also well within the footprint of the cube, and the building had none of the proposed finishes applied to the walls, nor was it constructed out of materials in those plans—namely, stone.[33]

Patrick Baron, a piano tuner and technician who worked in the area at the time, visited the island twice in 2012 to tune a piano inside the building. Baron later said the structure was a relatively small building near the coast and far from the other buildings. He said it was "dull pewter" in color, featured statues that resembled gargoyles atop the roof, and had a large glass door facing south.[34]

Baron confirmed the building against photographs provided by Trotter, despite its being blue and white in the images, based on its size, shape and location—indicating the distinctive stripes and false wooden door were painted after October 2012.[34] Footage captured by Tyler Oliveira, an American content creator who sneaked onto the island in 2023, shows that the building and surrounding area had been painted white.[35]

Interior

Baron described the interior as having one large room with two levels. The ground floor was 4 to 6 ft (1.2 to 1.8 m) tall and another on a slightly raised platform, which was accessed by a single step. The flooring looked wooden and was covered by a large Oriental rug. He recalls a grey sofa to his right, against the eastern wall.[34]

Directly ahead of him was a dark wood desk of about 10 ft (3 m) long. Behind it were several columns of floor-to-ceiling bookcases. To his left, against the western wall, was a small black grand piano. Baron's notes describe the piano as having been manufactured by the Rudolph Wurlitzer Company. Above the piano hung a portrait of Epstein and a Pope. Baron could not confirm which Pope it was.[34]

Maintenance and logistics

  • Helipad buildings – Two small structures with blue roofs next to the island's helicopter landing pad.[31]
  • Maintenance facilities / office – Two structures (Maintenance One and Two); Maintenance One features "sally port" type doors, while Maintenance Two has a white exterior with several sets of double doors.[31]
  • Sheds – Two single-story sheds with green-blue metal-like exteriors southwest of the Main Residence.[31]
  • Dock House – A small roofed structure at the end of a wooden dock.[31]

Visitors during Epstein's ownership

An aerial view showing Little Saint James in the upper right

Victoria's Secret models were among the guests a former Epstein employee saw at his Little St. James residence, and billionaire Les Wexner visited the island at least once.[15] Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor paid at least one visit aboard Epstein's private jet to the island; former staff said he visited Little St. James several times.[36] Peter Mandelson spent a week on the island in 2004.[37]

In 2015, Epstein emailed friends of his alleged victim Virginia Giuffre, asking them to disprove supposed allegations by Giuffre that physicist Stephen Hawking participated in an "underage orgy" in the Virgin Islands. Epstein said he "can issue a reward” to them if they can "prove her allegations are false". The email implies it was written in response to a "new version" of the claim about Hawking. Neither Giuffre, nor anyone else has ever publicly accused Hawking of sexual misconduct.[38][39][40]

Sergey Brin and his then fiancée, Anne Wojcicki, visited the island in 2007.[41] In December 2012, Howard Lutnick, his wife and their children visited the island, where they had lunch with Epstein.[42] Reid Hoffman and Joi Ito visited the island in November 2014, according to Epstein's records.[43] Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak visited the island multiple times from 2014 to 2015.[44] Jes Staley, the former head of Barclays, visited the island in 2015.[45]

Giuffre said in a lawsuit that while traveling with Epstein she saw Bill Clinton on the island.[46] A Freedom of Information Act request for United States Secret Service records of visits Clinton may have made to Little St. James produced no such evidence.[46] According to Epstein's flight logs, Clinton never flew on one of Epstein's planes near the U.S. Virgin Islands.[47] In July 2019, a Clinton spokesperson issued a statement saying Clinton never visited the island.[12][48]

In emails from 2011 and 2015, Epstein denies that Clinton ever visited the island.[49][50][51] In August 2025, the Department of Justice released a transcript of an interview between Maxwell and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche during which Maxwell said Naomi Campbell probably had visited Little Saint James at some point.[52]

Allegations and reputation under Epstein's ownership

The first allegations regarding Little Saint James pertained to a lawsuit alleging then 18-year-old Virginia Roberts had sex with Epstein and then-Prince Andrew in an orgy, with eight other girls who ""appeared to be under the age of 18" and didn't speak English.[3][36][53] Buckingham Palace denied the allegation.[54][55] A lawyer for Epstein called Roberts's allegations of orgies "old and discredited".[36]

In a 2016 deposition, Sarah Ransome said she visited Little Saint James with Epstein in 2007[56] as a 22 year old.[57] Ransome alleged they had an argument over her weight, causing her to attempt to swim off the island, before Epstein assembled a search party to bring her back.[56]

Little Saint James has been given numerous nicknames in the media, such as "Isle of Babes",[58] "Island of Sin",[36] "Pedophile Island",[59][13] "Orgy Island",[59][13] and "Epstein Island".[60]

According to a 2019 Vanity Fair article, two locals on St. Thomas said they saw Epstein board his plane in 2019 with girls "who appeared to be under the age of consent".[61] In August 2019, after Epstein's death, FBI agents searched his residence on Little St. James.[62][63]

See also

  • Age of consent in the U.S. Virgin Islands

References

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