Metro

Bizman sex rap looms

The feds are set to probe new underage-sex charges against pervy financier Jeffrey Epstein, who has already served 18 months for soliciting sex for minors, it was reported last night.

Another woman has told Britain’s Daily Mail that Epstein introduced her to his dirty old pals when she was his teen “traveling masseuse” starting in 2000.

The FBI investigation is expected to bring further scrutiny on Epstein’s friendship with British Prince Andrew — who has vowed to exile the Upper East Side pedophile from his court, the paper said.

The new accuser, Virginia Roberts, claims she was recruited at age 15 to be Epstein’s “prostitute for him and his friends who shared his interests in young girls,” she told the Mail.

A source close the investigation told the paper, “This is being taken very seriously.”

Roberts, now a married mother of three living in Australia, said she plans to cooperate.

She has previously described how she was brought into Epstein’s creepy world by Ghislaine Maxwell, the daughter of the disgraced late media baron Robert Maxwell.

Roberts said she was 17 when she was introduced to Andrew at Ghislaine Maxwell’s London home.

There is no suggestion that the prince had any sexual encounters while hanging out with Epstein.

Andrew, who has characterized his friendship with Epstein as “unwise,” will no longer be keeping company with the pedophile, the newspaper said.

The Mail said it is “highly likely” that investigators will want to talk to Andrew — who may be forced to plead diplomatic immunity because of his role as business envoy for the British government.

An e-mail request to Epstein’s lawyer, Alan Dershowitz, was not returned.

Meanwhile, lawyers for other women bringing civil cases against Epstein have quizzed two of his former employees about Andrew.

The female employees refused to say if they even met the prince, reported another British paper, the News of the World.

Sarah Kellen and Nadia Marcinkova invoked their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination on almost every question, according to the paper.