A law firm that represents Jeffrey Epstein’s estate in France is asking a judge to approve more than $370,000 in legal fees, according to new court papers.

Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP — which has offices in the US and in France — is asking for a judge to approve the fees for work the company did from Aug. 22 through Oct. 31, according to court documents filed in Epstein’s estate case in Virgin Islands Superior Court.

Epstein — who committed suicide by hanging in a Lower Manhattan lock up in August — had an apartment at a luxury Paris address near the Arc de Triomphe.

“The need for HHR’s representation of the Estate arose because of potential civil forfeiture of the Estate’s assets (including in Paris), ongoing criminal investigations in the Southern District of New York and Paris related to Mr. Epstein’s potential French litigation; French corporate, labor and employment issues,” lawyers on the VI estate case wrote in papers made public Wednesday.

In September, French prosecutors interviewed three alleged victims as part of their probe into whether the dead financier committed crimes there.

The investigation was centered around one of Epstein’s alleged procurers, celebrity modeling scout Jean-Luc Brunel, reports said at the time.

Lawyers for the estate did not immediately return a request for comment.