Marc Dober**'s name appears 192 times in documents seized from Jeffrey Epstein's financial network. The records show him communicating directly with Epstein — coordinating construction budgets and renovations on Epstein's private Caribbean island — while prosecutors never once named him in any investigation.
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The documents were among more than 1.3 million pages released following Epstein's 2019 arrest and death. Federal investigators seized records spanning accounts at JPMorgan Chase, Deutsche Bank, and a web of offshore entities. Buried in that archive: 192 references to a construction manager who oversaw work at Little Saint James, Epstein's 75-acre private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Document EFTA01590793 — a five-page correspondence dated November 29, 2011 — places Marc Dober at the center of Epstein's island operations. The record connects him directly to Epstein, Richard Kahn, and Harry Beller of HBRK Associates Inc., the financial management firm that handled Epstein's day-to-day accounts.
The November 2011 correspondence routes through entities including LSJ, LLC — the legal holding name for the Little Saint James island property — and lists banking relationships at JPMorgan Chase and FirstBank of Puerto Rico.
The island sat in the U.S. Virgin Islands. Epstein structured its ownership through a network of entities spanning Puerto Rico, St. Thomas, and the U.S. mainland. Dober's communications ran through that same financial architecture.
Documents also show Dober operating under the name MARC S DOBER, appearing as a distinct entity with 10 separate references in the archive — suggesting he conducted construction work through a personal business.
A second document, EFTA01590780 — a six-page financial record dated December 2, 2011 — places Dober alongside Epstein's core financial team once more. The record spans EFTA01590780 through EFTA01590785 and lists HBRK Associates Inc. as the managing firm, with accounts at JP Morgan and First Bank.
Also listed in the December 2011 record: a vendor called Accent on Windows. The appearance of a construction-adjacent contractor in a financial record bearing Dober's name fits the broader pattern in the archive — island renovations coordinated through Epstein's financial managers, paid from JPMorgan accounts.
Harry Beller and Richard Kahn, both named repeatedly alongside Dober, led HBRK Associates. The firm has been examined in prior civil litigation over JPMorgan's dealings with Epstein. Dober himself has not appeared in any of those proceedings.
Across Epstein's seized archive, Marc Dober's name appears 192 times. That figure places him in a select group — individuals named repeatedly across Epstein's financial records who have never faced public scrutiny or legal proceedings connected to those records.
Other figures from the island — including estate managers, household staff, and financial intermediaries — have been named in depositions, civil suits, and congressional inquiries. Dober has not.
His role, documented across nearly 200 records spanning at least late 2011 and early 2012, was construction and renovation management for one of the most scrutinized private properties in American legal history.
Epstein purchased Little Saint James in 1998. Over the following two decades, the island was extensively developed — a main residence, guest structures, a hilltop building, and utility infrastructure, all documented in contractor invoices and planning records spread across the seized archive.
Federal prosecutors described Little Saint James as a primary location for Epstein's abuse of underage victims. Ghislaine Maxwell, convicted in 2021 of sex trafficking conspiracy, managed operations across Epstein's properties including the island.
Construction and maintenance management at a property like Little Saint James required sustained coordination over years. Dober's 192 appearances in the seized records suggest exactly that kind of long-term operational role — managed through Epstein's financial structure and paid from accounts prosecutors later scrutinized in civil suits against JPMorgan Chase.
The documents do not allege wrongdoing by Marc Dober. They do not name him in any criminal context. They establish his sustained presence in Epstein's financial chain — as a contractor whose name passed repeatedly between Epstein and the bankers who managed his accounts.
What the documents do show is that one of the most scrutinized private properties in a federal sex trafficking case had an identifiable construction manager. His name appears 192 times in the seized records. He has not been asked to explain them publicly.
The full documents are available at invarchives.com.
All individuals mentioned are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.
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