New Mexico authorities on Monday started searching the notorious New Mexico ranch where late pedophile Jeffrey Epstein is accused of running a sick “baby-making” operation — and where a staffer once claimed strangled girls are buried.

The New Mexico Department of Justice announced that it started searching Epstein’s former Zorro Ranch on Monday morning at the direction of Attorney General Raúl Torrez, alongside local and state police.

Torrez reopened an investigation into the ranch last month, where the convicted sex offender once entertained guests, 30 miles south of Santa Fe. An original case opened to investigate the secretive outpost was closed in 2019 at the request of federal prosecutors in New York.

New Mexico authorities launched a search on Monday of the notorious Zorro Ranch, previously owned by disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein. REUTERS

State prosecutors have since argued that “revelations outlined in the previously sealed FBI files warrant further examination.”

Although the statement did not specify exactly what revelations were the focus of the search, they include long-running claims that the pervert flew girls there — and allegedly planned to get many pregnant.

Most disturbingly, a document in the Epstein files shows that a staffer once reported that “somewhere in the hills outside the Zorro, two foreign girls were buried on orders of Jeffrey and Madam G.”

“Both died by strangulation during rough, fetish sex,” alleged the unsubstantiated missive by the former employee whose name was redacted.

Epstein has never been charged with criminal wrongdoing in New Mexico, but the state attorney general’s office said in 2019 that it had interviewed possible victims who visited the massive ranch.

New Mexico state legislators also established a new commission last month to look into whether the desert ranch was used to facilitate sexual abuse and sex trafficking.

Epstein has never been charged with criminal wrongdoing in New Mexico, but the state attorney general’s office said in 2019 that it had interviewed possible victims who visited the massive ranch.

“This search is part of the criminal investigation announced by the New Mexico Department of Justice on February 19th into allegations of illegal activity at Epstein’s ranch prior to Epstein’s 2019 death,” the state DOJ wrote in a statement.

Authorities noted that they have had the cooperation of the ranch’s current property owners, who have allowed access for the search.

The dead child sex trafficker bought Zorro Ranch in 1993 from former Democratic Gov. Bruce King — building a sprawling property that included a 26,700-square-foot hacienda-style mansion, guest houses, a pool, ranch offices, a firehouse, heated garages, a private airstrip, a hangar and a helipad.

New Mexico state legislators also established a new commission last month to look into whether the desert ranch was used to facilitate sexual abuse and sex trafficking. AP

The property was later sold by Epstein’s estate in 2023 and purchased by the family of former Texas state Sen. Don Huffines, a candidate for Texas comptroller who won the Republican primary.

“The New Mexico Department of Justice will continue to keep the public appropriately informed, support the survivors, and follow the facts wherever they lead,” the agency said in a statement.

Epstein died in his Manhattan jail cell in 2019 while awaiting trial on charges that he sexually abused and trafficked dozens of underage girls.

With Post wires