The attorney general for the US Virgin Islands said she does not trust the two executors of Jeffrey Epstein’s estate to handle the case because they have a conflict of interest, according to new court papers.

Attorney General Denise George alleged in a Jan. 15 lawsuit that Epstein sexually abused so many underage girls on his private islands Little St. James and Great St. James as recently as last year that he needed a computer database to keep track of them. The AG is seeking forfeitures and penalties including the seizure of his two islands.

Now, George wants to intervene in the dead pedophile’s estate case to make sure her claims are represented and to ensure VI laws are followed especially given, George says, the fact that the executors of the estate have a conflict of interest, according to court documents made public Monday.

George says there is a conflict of interest because the two executors of the financier’s estate, Darren Indyke and Richard Kahn, “served as officers or trustees” of companies and Epstein’s trust which are named in her lawsuit.

“The Government has an interest in the assets of the Estate, as well as an interest in ensuring that the laws of the Virgin Islands are enforced for the benefit of the Government and victims of Epstein’s crimes,” George wrote in the court filings. “The Executors of the Estate, who are alleged to have been affiliated with various entities that participated in Epstein’s criminal enterprise, cannot adequately protect the rights of the interest of the Government.”

“Intervention is the only vehicle available to assure that the Government will not suffer detrimental harm by the actions of the Executors,” George said.

If any of Epstein’s $577 million fortune is distributed to victims, the VI government should be involved “because of its interest in the assets and disposition of the Estate, and because the Attorney General’s authority, and responsibility, to advocate for the public interest and enforce the laws of the Virgin Islands,” George said.

Epstein died by suicide in a Lower Manhattan lockup in August as he was awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

The 66-year-old hedge-funder put all of his holdings into a trust when he filed his will two days before his death.

His estate has since been sued by over two dozen women who claim they were sexually abused or raped when they were underage.

The estate has sought to set up a victim compensation fund to handle paying all of the alleged victims.

A lawyer with the estate and a lawyer for the executors did not immediately return a request for comment.