How Jeffrey Epstein, the mysterious hedge-fund manager arrested on sex-trafficking charges, made his fortune

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How Jeffrey Epstein, the mysterious hedge-fund manager arrested on sex-trafficking charges, made his fortune

jeffery epstein

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Jeffrey Epstein, who as a financier hobnobbed with Donald Trump, the Clintons, and Hollywood celebrities, was arrested over the weekend on suspicion of sex-trafficking minors.

According to charges filed July 8, the 66-year-old former financier used his fortune to pay underage women to give him massages that became increasingly sexual in nature.

Little is known about where Epstein's fortune comes from. Epstein rose to prominence as the money manager of L Brands CEO Les Wexner, Vanity Fair reported in a lengthy profile in 2011. Unlike other well-known financiers, Epstein kept the client list and investments of his US Virgin Islands-based firm - in addition to his own personal net worth - confidential.

Read more: Jeffrey Epstein has reportedly been arrested and charged with sex trafficking of minors

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Keep reading to learn where Jeffrey Epstein reportedly made his fortune.

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Jeffrey Epstein got his start in finance at Bear Sterns.

Jeffrey Epstein got his start in finance at Bear Sterns.

Epstein's first job in finance was working as an options trader at Bear Sterns, according to NBC News. He'd previously been a teacher at the Dalton School, an exclusive Manhattan college preparatory school.

Epstein reached the level of limited partner at Bear Sterns before he left the company to launch his own firm in 1981, Vanity Fair reported.

Epstein's firm was originally called J. Epstein & Co. before being renamed Financial Trust Co.

Read more: Meet Jeffrey Epstein, the financier reportedly arrested on suspicion of sex trafficking who's rubbed elbows with Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, and Kevin Spacey

Epstein said his fortune comes from the fees he charged his billionaire clients, according to Vanity Fair.

Epstein said his fortune comes from the fees he charged his billionaire clients, according to Vanity Fair.

Epstein refused to reveal his client list to Vanity Fair, other than saying that they all have assets in excess of $1 billion. The secrecy is unusual among top financiers, the magazine reported.

"I was the only person crazy enough, or arrogant enough, or misplaced enough, to make my limit a billion dollars or more," Epstein has said on multiple occasions, according to Vanity Fair's reports. Epstein said he invests his client's fortunes into currency markets.

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Epstein does have one well-known former client: Les Wexner, CEO of L Brands.

Epstein does have one well-known former client: Les Wexner, CEO of L Brands.

Wexner was not only Epstein's only confirmed client, but also a close friend, according to Vanity Fair. Epstein reportedly had an active role in L Brands, which owns Bath & Body Works, Express, and Victoria's Secret. Vanity Fair reported that Wexner even asked Epstein to fire L Brands employees.

Epstein denies rumors that he owes his firm's success to Wexner, however. "I had really rich clients before," Vanity Fair reported.

Wexner later fired Epstein. "Mr. Wexner severed ties with Mr. Epstein more than a decade ago," an L Brands spokesperson told Forbes. Wexner has a net worth of $6.7 billion, according to Bloomberg.

Epstein has also been paid to help clients recover money stolen by fraudulent brokers and lawyers, a review of 1989 court documents by Vanity Fair found.

Epstein has also been paid to help clients recover money stolen by fraudulent brokers and lawyers, a review of 1989 court documents by Vanity Fair found.

That aspect of Epstein's business took up 80% of his time, he said in a deposition. Epstein referred to himself as a "bounty hunter," according to Vanity Fair.

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Epstein has been sued on various occasions.

Epstein has been sued on various occasions.

The US Attorney's Office sued Epstein in 1998, alleging he illegally subleased the former home of the deputy consul general of Iran, charging the new tenant $5,000 more a month in rent than the State Department charged him for the residence. However, a review of court documents by Vanity Fair found the US Attorney's Office lost the case.

Epstein was also sued by Citibank in 2003 for defaulting on loans he took out to fund investments, according to Vanity Fair.

Epstein resides in a townhouse in New York City's Upper East Side. Bloomberg has valued it at $77 million.

Epstein resides in a townhouse in New York City's Upper East Side. Bloomberg has valued it at $77 million.

Wexner used a trust to buy the residence (which is believed to be the largest private residence in Manhattan) for $13.2 million in 1989, Vanity Fair reported. Epstein moved in after Wexner and his wife Abigail Koppel moved to Ohio in 1996. Wexner's trust transferred ownership of the house to Epstein in 2011 for $0, Bloomberg reported.

Prosecutors are in the process of seizing the house, which they claim was the scene of some of Epstein's alleged crimes, according to Bloomberg.

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While the exact size of Epstein's fortune is unclear, Forbes estimates it is less than $1 billion.

While the exact size of Epstein's fortune is unclear, Forbes estimates it is less than $1 billion.

Epstein has never appeared on Forbes' ranking on the world's billionaires because of a lack of evidence on the size of his fortune, the magazine reported. The reported source of Epstein's wealth continues to be his hedge fund, which has released no public records.

Most of Epstein's wealth is held in the US Virgin Islands.

Most of Epstein's wealth is held in the US Virgin Islands.

Financial Trust Co. is incorporated in St. Thomas, according to Forbes. Spencer Kuvin, the attorney who represented three of Epstein's alleged victims in the 2011 sexual assault case in Florida told Forbes that despite their efforts, those court proceedings did not reveal the size of Epstein's fortune. Epstein's lawyers said only that his net worth had "nine figures."

"In the litigation itself we were never able to get him to produce verified financial information," Kuvin told Forbes. " The 'nine figures' came by negotiation. It kept going up and up and up. They started at zero — they wouldn't tell us at all."

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