Ghislaine Maxwell has been dismissed by her lawyers for not being able to foot the bill.

Lawyers for convicted sex trafficker Juliana Cigler have withdrawn their representation in her attempt to extract cash from Jeffrey Epstein’s estate, according to documents filed in the US Virgin Islands.

Despite numerous requests, Maxwell has been unable to pay the firm Quintairos, Prieto, Wood, & Boyer. According to the paperwork filed by that firm, “despite repeated requests,” Maxwell has yet to compensate them.

It’s the second time this month that a socialite has been knocked down.

Maxwell is currently serving a 20-year sentence in a low-security prison in Tallahassee, Florida. In addition, she is being sued by her criminal defense team for failing to pay legal fees of more than $850,000.

Maxwell, 60, filed a suit against Epstein’s estate in the Virgin Islands in March 2020. This was seven months after her former lover and ’employer’ committed suicide by hanging himself with bedsheets in his cell in the Metropolitan Corrections Center, New York.

The disgraced financier maintained a notorious home on the Caribbean territories’ Little St. James Island, which became known as ‘pedophile island’ due to his criminal activities there. He also owned Great St. James.

Maxwell’s suit stated that Epstein had promised ‘indemnification for and advancement of attorneys’ fees, security costs, costs to find safe accommodation and all other expenses [she] has reasonably incurred and will incur by reason of her prior employment relationship with Jeffrey E. Epstein.’

The expenses that she anticipated, ‘in connection with any threatened, pending or completed suit [in] relation to Epstein…and his alleged victims.’

During her relationship with Jeffrey Epstein, Maxwell stated that he ‘promised that he would support her financially.’ Her suit states that he ‘made these promises…repeatedly, both in writing and conversation.’

In 2008, Epstein was found guilty in Palm Beach, Florida, of procuring a child for prostitution and soliciting a prostitute.

Since then, she has supposedly ‘incurred legal fees and expenses in connection with various suits,’ including civil claims filed by Epstein’s victims.

‘Consistent with his repeated promises,’ the suit states, ‘Epstein indemnified Maxwell and advanced legal fees and settlement costs incurred in relation to a civil suit brought by victim Sarah Ransome in 2017 and a 2009 suit brought by Virginia Roberts (now Giuffre).’

When Maxwell filed a claim with the estate on November 22, 2019, it did not “honor or even formally respond,” according to court documents.

Maxwell, who was criminally investigated at the time, filed her case the next March.

She now has sixty days to locate new attorneys, but it’s doubtful she’ll be able to pay them given the civil lawsuit filed against her by her criminal defense team.