A crumpled note clutched in Virginia Giuffre’s hand, discovered hours after her suicide on April 25, 2025, stunned her family with its fierce plea: “Mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers need to stand together to fight for the future of victims.”

The handwritten message—found beside her body on the Neergabby farm in Western Australia—was her final call to arms, scrawled in hurried ink on a torn page from her journal. Family members, including brother Sky Roberts, confirmed its authenticity in a May 1, 2025, statement: “Virginia’s last words weren’t despair—they were defiance. She wanted us to carry her fight.”
The plea resonated globally, amplifying her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice (released October 21, 2025), detailing grooming at 16 by Ghislaine Maxwell, trafficking by Jeffrey Epstein, and alleged assaults by Prince Andrew (named 88 times). “She knew the cost,” Sky said, voice cracking. “Custody battles took her children; threats and smears took her peace. But she never stopped urging unity.”
Survivors and advocates rallied: Annie Farmer called it “Virginia’s baton—passed to us.” The note trended #StandTogetherForVictims with 4.2 million posts (82% supportive), fueling Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures (completed December 19). Western Australia Police ruled non-suspicious suicide; coroner’s report pending.
Giuffre’s crumpled plea—raw, unrelenting—ensured her silenced voice roared eternal: not goodbye, but a charge to fight on, together.
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