Pedophile Jeffrey Epstein kept a harem of abused and trafficked girls as young as 11 that was so large he needed a computer system to keep track of them, according to a new lawsuit filed Wednesday against his estate.

The civil lawsuit, filed by Virgin Islands’ Attorney General Denise George, also alleges Epstein abused victims on his private Caribbean islands, Little Saint James and Great St. James, as recently as 2019 — expanding the scope of his abuse by 14 years.

“Epstein used his wealth and power to create the Epstein Enterprise which engaged in a pattern of criminal activity in the Virgin Islands by repeatedly procuring and subjecting underage girls and young women to unlawful sexual conduct, sex trafficking and forced labor,” the lawsuit reads. “This complaint describes intentional conduct so egregious, persistent, and injurious that it shocks the conscience and offends a civilized society.”

The lawsuit reiterates much of what’s already known about Epstein’s alleged decades of abuse but brings to light a new detail on how he used computer databases to keep track of his victims, and how his private islands were the “perfect hideaway and haven” for trafficking and abusing young women and underage girls.

“The Epstein Enterprise kept a computerized list of underage girls who were in or proximate to the Virgin Islands, and able to be transported to Epstein’s residence at Little Saint James in the Virgin Islands,” the papers say.

“The Epstein Enterprise used the term ‘work’ as a code for sexual abuse, and, upon information and belief, reportedly kept computer records of the contact information for the victims.”

Additionally, Epstein — who’d been facing a criminal probe in New York before his apparent suicide in a Manhattan jail cell last year — had only been accused of abusing girls up until 2005. The lawsuit filed by George expands his alleged abuse by 14 years.

“As recent as 2018, air traffic controllers and other airport personnel reported seeing Epstein leave his plane with young girls, some of whom appeared to be between the age of 11 and 18 years,” the papers say.

The suit argues Epstein ran a decades-long sex trafficking scheme from his private Caribbean estates where minors were “lured and recruited” to travel by helicopter, plane and boat to the islands under fradulent promises and were then raped and abused by Epstein and his associates, the papers say.

Epstein promised the girls modeling contracts or told them they’d be paid “substantially” to provide massages — a ruse that brought the victims close to Epstein, who’d then pressure and coerce them into engaging in sex acts, the suit states.

The lawsuit detailed a harrowing account from a 15-year-old victim who was so desperate to escape Epstein’s abuse that she tried to swim off the island after she was forced into sex acts with Epstein and his co-conspirators.

“Epstein and others organized a search party that located her and kept her captive by, among other things, confiscating her passport,” the suit says.

Finally, the lawsuit alleges Epstein transferred “significant assets” into a trust two days before he died when he had numerous actions pending against him from his many victims.

The Caribbean locale claims the transfer of those assets “beyond the jurisdiction of the probate court” were fraudulent. They are seeking the forfeiture of both of the islands, and could disburse Epstein’s remaining $577 million in assets to girls and women he abused in the region.

In a press conference late Wednesday, George detailed her suit and implored other victims, and members of the public, to come forward if they have more information on Epstein’s criminal activity.

“We cannot go back in time but we do need your help to see that justice is done now. We have a fresh chance,” George said.

“The Virgin Islands is not and will not be a safe haven for sex trafficking.”

The co-executors of Epstein’s estate said in a statement: “The Estate is being administered in accordance with the laws of the U.S. Virgin Islands and under the supervision of the Superior Court of the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Co-Executors will not otherwise comment on this or any other pending litigation.”