Jeffrey Epstein’s Trust Reveals Beneficiaries of His Fortune
Two days before he killed himself in a federal jail, Jeffrey Epstein signed a document that gave away much of his once vast estate, a total of $100 million, to his girlfriend at the time. In the document, the registered sex offender said he had contemplated marrying his girlfriend, Karyna Shuliak, and wanted to give her his 33-carat diamond ring. A copy of the 32-page document — called the 1953 Trust — was included in the roughly three million pages of investigative files about Mr. Epstein that the Justice Department released on Friday. It is unclear just how much Ms. Shuliak and the other 40 people mentioned as potential beneficiaries will get from his estate, which has shrunk considerably over the past seven years after paying taxes, restitutions to victims and hefty lawyers’ fees. The trust, named for the year Mr. Epstein was born, had never been made public before. The document called for Ms. Shuliak, 36, to get a total of $100 million, which included a $50 million annuity to be set up for her benefit. It also provided for her to get much of his property, though the estate has sold most of his residences
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