Jeffrey Epstein’s accused procuress Ghislaine Maxwell issued a chilling death threat to one of his accusers after she reported Epstein to police, according to one of three new lawsuits filed Tuesday against the dead pedophile’s multimillion-dollar estate.

In her suit, Maria Farmer said she was an aspiring artist when she was recruited at the age of 26 by Epstein and Maxwell at an art opening in New York in 1995.

Farmer said the perv and his gal “violently sexually assaulted” her in the summer of 1996 while she was working on an art project at Epstein’s guest house on the Ohio estate of Victoria’s Secret chief Les Wexner, the court papers say.

Wexner’s security personnel “held Maria against her will” and did not let her leave for several hours, “even after she pleaded with them and told them about her assault,” the suit alleges.

After returning to New York, Farmer went to police and a Vanity Fair reporter. Then Maxwell made a series of menacing phone calls threatening her career, and then her life, according to the papers.

“Maxwell again called Maria to threaten her, but this time threatened her life: ‘I know you go to the West Side Highway all the time. While you’re out there, just be really careful because there are a lot of ways to die there,'” the suit said.

Farmer said she also witnessed firebrand attorney Alan Dershowitz at Epstein’s Upper East Side mansion on a number of occasions, going upstairs with the young girls who were there.

Maxwell’s lawyer declined to comment, while attorneys for the executors of Epstein’s estate did not respond to requests for comment.

Dershowitz categorically denied that Farmer could have seen him in Epstein’s house, saying she’d terminated her relationship with the financier before he began representing him.

“It’s impossible chronologically that she could have seen me,” said the Harvard Law professor — adding he planned to ask a judge to sanction her attorney, David Boies, and “strike the perjurious paragraph.”

Farmer filed her suit Tuesday alongside co-accusers Annie Farmer — her younger sister — and Teresa Helm. All three women are seeking damages from Epstein’s $577 million estate, citing battery and emotional distress. They are all being represented by Boies, who is embroiled in his own legal battle with Dershowitz.

In her suit, Annie Farmer said she was molested by the hedge fund manager at a New York movie theater when she was 16 years old and that the abuse continued when Epstein and Maxwell flew her to his New Mexico ranch.

Farmer said Epstein took an interest in her after her older sister Maria began working for him.

Epstein and Maxwell flew Farmer to New Mexico after Epstein lied to the girl’s mother — telling the woman he was sponsoring an event for high school students at his New Mexico ranch, according to the suit.

It was in New Mexico that the pair repeatedly assaulted the teen, the papers say.

Epstein allegedly fondled Annie in the theater, as he had done in New York while Maria sat unwittingly on the other side of him, before the assault continued at Epstein’s ranch.

“That trip to the movies was followed by Maxwell giving Annie a massage, and groping her nude breasts while Epstein watched,” the papers allege.

In her suit, Helm said she was hired by Epstein at the age of 22 as a traveling masseuse and claimed he sexually assaulted her at his UES mansion in September 2002.

“As Teresa was studying massage at the California Healing Arts College, this seemed like a dream opportunity, but her hopes were dashed when it quickly turned into sexual assault,” the suit read.

In August this year, fellow accuser Jennifer Araoz also filed a lawsuit against the late pedophile’s estate and Maxwell, claiming Epstein raped her at his townhouse when she was just 15.