Virginia Giuffre’s voice, silenced by suicide in April 2025 at age 41, echoes louder than ever in her posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice. Released this week amid the Trump administration’s push to unseal federal Epstein files, the 367-page book delivers raw, unflinching accounts of being trafficked as a teenager to politicians, royals, and billionaires – men who, she writes, treated her suffering as an exclusive perk of their status.
Giuffre, once known as Virginia Roberts, details how Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell lured her at 16 from a job at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in 2000. What began as a promise of massage training spiraled into a nightmare of coercion and exploitation across Epstein’s sprawling properties: a New York townhouse, a New Mexico ranch, and his private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands. “They lent me out like a party favor,” Giuffre writes, describing “rooms of silence” – opulent spaces where screams went unheard, and NDAs were signed with cash-stuffed envelopes.

The book expands on her public accusations, painting a web of hidden deals and clandestine flights on Epstein’s “Lolita Express” jet. Giuffre claims she was flown to London, where Maxwell arranged her first encounter with Prince Andrew in 2001. “He believed it was his birthright,” she recounts of the disgraced royal, detailing three alleged assaults, including one where Epstein paid her $15,000 afterward. Andrew, who settled her 2021 lawsuit for an undisclosed sum estimated at $12 million, has vehemently denied any wrongdoing, insisting he never met her.
Giuffre spares few details of the psychological toll. She describes being forced into encounters with unnamed “apex predators” – a term she uses for the elite circle Epstein cultivated. One chilling passage recounts being trafficked to “Billionaire Number One” and his pregnant wife at Palm Beach’s Breakers resort, her first “lending” outside Epstein’s direct control. Another involves a “heralded statesman,” the oldest man she serviced, who allegedly assaulted her savagely in New York and Palm Beach, uninterested in “caresses.” She hints at politicians, including a gubernatorial candidate in a “western state” post-election and a “respected former U.S. attorney,” plus academics from Ivy League schools whose research Epstein funded.
Bill Clinton and Donald Trump appear peripherally. Giuffre writes of meeting Trump at Mar-a-Lago, where he helped her find babysitting gigs but never socially engaged. Clinton, she claims, flew on Epstein’s jet multiple times but wasn’t abusive toward her. Both men have distanced themselves: Trump banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago after a 2007 incident involving a member’s daughter, while Clinton’s team insists his trips were for foundation work.
The memoir’s release coincides with mounting pressure on the DOJ under Attorney General Pam Bondi to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, signed by Trump on November 20, 2025. Victims’ advocates hope the mid-December document drop will corroborate Giuffre’s claims with flight logs, medical records, and witness statements. “This book isn’t revenge – it’s reckoning,” said co-author Amy Wallace, who spent four years interviewing Giuffre in Australia. Wallace reveals Giuffre’s early traumas: abuse by her father from age seven, street life at 14, and grooming by trafficker Ron Eppinger before Epstein.
Giuffre’s narrative underscores systemic failures. Epstein’s 2008 Florida plea deal – a “sweetheart” arrangement criticized for leniency – allowed him to continue, she alleges. Maxwell, convicted in 2021 and serving 20 years, denies all involvement, calling Giuffre’s accounts fabrications. Epstein died by suicide in 2019 awaiting trial.
Experts praise the book’s blend of horror and hope. “Giuffre humanizes the ‘made’ victim,” said Dr. Lisa Damour, a psychologist. “She shows how power silences, but persistence amplifies.” Social media has amplified it: #NobodyGirl trended with 3 million posts, sparking calls for royal title stripping for Andrew and renewed scrutiny of Epstein’s network.
Giuffre founded Victims Refuse Silence in 2015, advocating for trafficking laws. Her memoir ends with a plea: “Justice isn’t given – it’s taken.” As federal files loom, her words challenge the powerful: the silence ends now.
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