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Epstein Estate ‘Revived’ by IRS: From Under $40M to $145M, But Victims Sue as Money May Go to Heirs l

January 27, 2026 by hoangle Leave a Comment

Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s monstrous abuse, who thought their long fight for compensation was finally nearing its end, are reeling from a stunning reversal: the estate that had shriveled to under $40 million after paying out more than $160 million to nearly 200 victims has suddenly surged back to $145 million, resurrected by a jaw-dropping $112 million IRS tax refund. The windfall arrived because the estate overpaid taxes on assets—like the infamous Manhattan mansion—that sold for far less than the inflated values used in initial filings. But this unexpected lifeline isn’t automatically headed to those still demanding full justice; lawsuits now warn it could instead pour into the pockets of Epstein’s brother Mark, his girlfriend Karyna Shuliak, or other heirs and associates tied to his dark legacy. As fresh legal battles erupt, the agonizing question hangs in the air: will this revived fortune at last deliver meaningful restitution to the women who suffered—or quietly slip away to those who stood closest to the predator?

Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s monstrous abuse, who thought their long fight for compensation was finally nearing its end, are reeling from a stunning reversal: the estate that had shriveled to under $40 million after paying out more than $160 million to nearly 200 victims has suddenly surged back to $145 million, resurrected by a jaw-dropping $112 million IRS tax refund. The windfall arrived because the estate overpaid taxes on assets—like the infamous Manhattan mansion—that sold for far less than the inflated values used in initial filings. But this unexpected lifeline isn’t automatically headed to those still demanding full justice; lawsuits now warn it could instead pour into the pockets of Epstein’s brother Mark, his girlfriend Karyna Shuliak, or other heirs and associates tied to his dark legacy. As fresh legal battles erupt, the agonizing question hangs in the air: will this revived fortune at last deliver meaningful restitution to the women who suffered—or quietly slip away to those who stood closest to the predator?

When Epstein died by suicide in 2019, his estate was valued at roughly $578–636 million, featuring lavish properties including the Manhattan townhouse (listed near $90–112 million but sold for $51 million), Palm Beach home, New Mexico’s Zorro Ranch, Little St. James island (sold for $60 million), art, jewelry, and investments. Sales often fell short amid scrutiny, draining resources fast. The Epstein Victims’ Compensation Program, which ran from 2020 to 2021, distributed over $121 million to more than 150 survivors. Broader settlements—including bank deals like JPMorgan’s $290 million and Deutsche Bank’s $75 million, plus a $105 million U.S. Virgin Islands agreement—pushed victim-related payouts toward $164 million or more across nearly 200 people. Additional costs, such as repaying a $30 million loan and tens of millions in legal fees, left the estate hovering under $40 million by early 2025.

The reversal stemmed from a $111.6–112 million IRS refund in late 2024. Executors had prepaid about $190 million in 2020 estate taxes based on high initial valuations. When realizations proved lower, the IRS refunded the excess—a standard procedure for estates with valuation adjustments, tax experts confirm. U.S. Virgin Islands probate filings reflected the boost, pushing assets to $145 million (with some reports citing $131 million in specific snapshots or up to $150 million including entities and cash).

Yet prior settlements included broad releases, closing most major victim channels for new claims from this influx. Remaining funds flow under Epstein’s will and the “1953 Trust,” with beneficiaries largely private. Key figures include brother Mark Epstein, girlfriend Karyna Shuliak (linked to roughly $4.65 million in personal property and his last non-jail contact), and co-executors Darren Indyke (longtime lawyer) and Richard Kahn (accountant)—co-trustees who have denied aiding Epstein’s crimes in ongoing lawsuits but control distributions.

Lingering class actions and congressional probes (releasing thousands of estate documents in 2025) demand transparency, potentially constraining payouts to alleged enablers. Victims’ advocates rage at the irony: money once depleted for restitution now risks benefiting insiders.

The haunting uncertainty endures—will courts enforce equitable reallocations for survivors carrying indelible trauma, or let the fortune fade into Epstein’s circle? Financial remedies offer partial solace, but true justice requires acknowledgment, accountability, and prevention of such systemic failures.

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