Exclusive | Jeffrey Epsteins antique Viennese desk kept inside his creepy NYC home heads to auction the latest in a secret sale that has already netted $100K

A New Jersey auction house has quietly sold at least $100,000 worth of convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein’s artworks and furnishings — and there’s even more to come.At least two dozen decorative items sold in Millea Bros.Auctioneers’ “select” auctions — the second round of which began this week — eerily appear in photographs of the disgraced financier’s former East 71st Street mansion, The Post has learned.
The first set of “select” sales took place in June.What’s more, the auction house’s descriptions of the individual lots for sale don’t make any mention of previous ownership by Epstein.Epstein kept these objects inside his 20,000-square-foot Manhattan dwelling, located at 9 E.71st St., where he entertained the who’s who of society — and preyed upon countless girls.
The limestone manse sold to former Goldman Sachs exec Michael Daffey in 2021, two years after Epstein’s death, for the bargain price of $51 million.(It listed in 2020 for $88 million.) City records indicate Daffey completed tear-down renovations on five of its seven floors.An upcoming auction on Friday promises at least one more item sourced from the foreboding home: A massive 1820s desk from Vienna identical to one that once held court in Epstein’s opulent study.
At present, it boasts a single $2,500 bid.The desk measures more than 5 feet in depth and more than 9 feet in length, according to the auction’s item description.It was last purchased from a Paris studio in 2006.
The description also traces its origins to the “House of Lichtenstein” — evidently tied to the royal family of the principality of Lichtenstein, a micro-country located between Switzerland and Austria.Daniel Weiner, an attorney representing Epstein’s estate, confirmed the estate oversaw a bulk sale of the items last year.“Consistent with their obligations as co-executors of the Epstein Estate, our clients have systematically marshalled the Estate’s assets in order to effect its o...