Tech billionaire Elon Musk reportedly inquired about visiting Little St. James — the infamous Caribbean estate dubbed “Pedo Island” — in early 2014 but never went, according to emails released by the Justice Department.
On December 13, 2013, the Tesla and SpaceX CEO emailed Jeffrey Epstein, saying his family would “be in the BVI/St. Bart’s area over the holidays” and asking, “Is there a good time to visit?”
Epstein replied, “[A]ny day [Jan.] 1st-8th. [P]lay it by ear if you want. [A]lways space for you.”

Tech billionaire Elon Musk reportedly asked Jeffrey Epstein about visiting Little St. James — the infamous Caribbean estate known as “Pedo Island” — in early 2014.
After Musk suggested “probably the 1st then,” Epstein replied, “[T]he 2 or 3 would be perfect. I will come and get you.” The two tentatively agreed on a January 2 visit, but it was never confirmed. Epstein’s assistant, Lesley Groff, reminded him on New Year’s Eve: “Just a reminder Elon Musk was asking about coming to your island Jan. 2…”
Epstein followed up with Musk on January 1, suggesting: “sorry we didn’t connect, why don’t you consider clearing customs into the states in st thomas, come for lunch with the wife[?]” Musk responded the next day, saying, “Logistics won’t work this time around.”
Musk, now 54, was reportedly scheduled to visit the island later in December 2014, according to Epstein’s daily agenda released in September by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee. At the time, Epstein was at his New Mexico ranch.
“Elon never went. I can tell you that 100%,” a source close to Musk told The Post, adding that the South Africa-born mogul had “no social relationship” with Epstein “whatsoever.”
Epstein’s notorious Caribbean estate, Little St. James — often called “Pedo Island” — continues to draw public scrutiny.
Spokespeople for Elon Musk’s companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the latest disclosures.
Musk is among dozens of prominent business and political figures named in a mass release of Justice Department files on Friday, part of a transparency initiative enacted by Congress last year due to widespread public interest in the Epstein case.
Interest in the files was reignited after Attorney General Pam Bondi last February appeared to suggest she was reviewing a client list tied to illicit sexual services. In July, Bondi issued a memo stating that “no further disclosure would be appropriate,” a decision that drew bipartisan criticism.
The memo noted that Epstein and his associate Ghislaine Maxwell “harmed over one thousand victims,” but said investigators “[w]e did not uncover evidence that could predicate an investigation against uncharged third parties.”
Musk also fueled public curiosity about Epstein, claiming last June — amid a brief dispute with former President Donald Trump — that “@realDonaldTrump is in the Epstein files. That is the real reason they have not been made public.” Trump, for his part, says he ended his own friendship with Epstein in the early 2000s after the financier recruited massage staff from Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort.