Jeffrey Epstein's armed guards and the sharp rocks that lie beneath the turquoise waters glistening around his Caribbean island have long deterred boaters from the area, but curiosity has overcome concern since the financier apparently killed himself in jail as he awaited trial in New York on sex trafficking charges.
Tourists and locals alike are powering up boats to take a closer look at a place nicknamed "Paedophile Island" that lies just off the southeast coast of St Thomas. Among the attractions are two huge white-and-yellow cockatiel statues that stand guard at the top of a set of stairs near the dock, as well as a life-size Holstein-Friesian cow statue that locals say was moved to a different spot weekly and sometimes even daily while Epstein lived there.
"No one used to pay attention to it," Jon Stewart, the owner of a charter boat company, said this week. Now, "there's a tonne more tourists".
Federal authorities consider Little St James Island to have been Epstein's primary residence in the United States, a place where at least one alleged victim said in a court affidavit that she participated in an orgy as well as had sex with Epstein and others.
Curiosity in St Thomas peaked this week as a group of FBI agents descended on Little St James Island and carried away what locals say were several large items from one of two islands that Epstein, 66, owned.