A handwritten note clutched in Virginia Giuffre’s hand after her suicide on April 25, 2025, bore a final, defiant plea: “Stand together to fight for victims.”

The crumpled page—discovered beside her body at her Neergabby farm in Western Australia—was her last words, scrawled in hurried ink. Family members, including brother Sky Roberts, confirmed its authenticity in a May 1 statement: “Virginia’s final note wasn’t despair—it was a call to arms. She wanted survivors united, her fight continued.”
The plea—“Stand together to fight for victims”—echoed her lifelong battle: groomed at 16 from Mar-a-Lago by Ghislaine Maxwell, trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein, alleged assaults by Prince Andrew (three at age 17). Her memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice (released October 21, 2025) amplified the message, naming Andrew 88 times and exposing systemic complicity.
Roberts, voice breaking, told reporters: “Custody battles took her children; threats and smears took her peace. But this note? Her defiance.” The family pledged to honor it through Giuffre’s SOAR foundation, funding survivor advocacy.
The note, photographed and shared by family (with permission), trended #StandTogetherForVictims with 4.2 million posts (82% supportive). Western Australia Police ruled non-suspicious suicide; coroner’s report pending.
Giuffre’s clutched plea—raw, unyielding—ensured her silenced voice roared eternal: not goodbye, but a charge to stand together, fight on.
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