The U.S. Virgin Islands is trying to subpoena Google co-founder Larry Page in a lawsuit against JPMorgan Chase over his role in Jeffrey Epstein’s human trafficking ring – but cannot find Page to hand over documents to him, Court records were released on Thursday.
The Virgin Islands government wants to subpoena the 50-year-old billionaire head of Google since it believes Page could have had ties to a convicted pedophile who was a client of JPMorgan.
The location “is a high net price person who Epstein could have referred or attempted to refer to JPMorgan,” the court documents read.
The unique lawsuit was filed against a significant bank in December 2022. It was alleged that JPMorgan “turned a blind eye to evidence of human trafficking for greater than a decade due to Epstein’s own financial footprint and due to the deals and clients Epstein brought and promised to bring to the bank.”
Page is believed to be one in every of those clients, and this will not be the primary time the Virgin Islands government has tried to issue a subpoena to Page to discover more.
A previous attempt to subpoena Page had been made on April 11, court records said, and the federal government “made good faith attempts to obtain Larry Page’s address, including hiring an investigation firm to search public databases for possible addresses.”
“Our processing server attempted to perform service on the addresses provided by our investigation firm, but discovered that the addresses weren’t valid for Mr. Page,” the documents read.
![Billionaire Google co-founder Larry Page, 50.](https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/05/NYPICHPDPICT000009798823.jpg?w=1024)
As such, the federal government is asking Manhattan Federal Court Judge Jed Rakoff “to issue an order authorizing alternative service of subpoena,” meaning that subpoena could also be delivered by mail or forwarded to a 3rd party for forwarding page.
Page – who still works at Google’s parent company Alphabet – stays largely out of the general public eye. And even though it will not be clear where he lives, legal documents obtained by Insider revealed that Page owns 4 islands and reportedly spent many of the pandemic hiding in Fiji.
Three of Page’s islands are in the Caribbean, Hand Lollik, neighboring Little Hans Lollik, and Eustatia Island, while Tavarua lies to the west of the essential island of Fijan.
![It's unclear where Page is located, but he was spotted on Tavarua (pictured), an island he owns in Fiji, during the pandemic.](https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/05/NYPICHPDPICT000010628793.jpg?w=1024)
![Jeffrey Epstein](https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2023/05/NYPICHPDPICT000009821903-6.jpg?w=1024)
Two sources he told Insider that they’d seen Page on the island throughout the pandemic. One source said he was spotted doing a hydrofoil – a style of swell where a board floats over the water – together with his wife Lucinda Southworth.
Page will not be the one billionaire businessman the U.S. Virgin Islands has sued over their ties to Epstein and JPMorgan. Previous subpoenas have been sent to fellow Google co-founder Sergei Brin, Hyatt Hotels CEO Thomas Pritzker, high-profile media executive Mortimer Zuckerman and former CAA talent agency CEO Michael Ovitz.
That is all a part of the federal government’s attempt to sue JPMorgan for its involvement in Epstein’s continued abuse of women and young women, which is believed to have occurred primarily at Epstein’s Virgin Islands mansion.
Thursday’s filing “also revealed that JPMorgan had been financially benefiting from deposits made by Epstein … in exchange for known facilitation and undisclosed participation in Epstein’s human trafficking enterprise.”