A hushed BBC Newsnight studio erupted as Amy Wallace, co-author of Virginia Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, leaned forward with fierce conviction on October 20, 2025: “The names are in the files.”

Wallace, speaking to Victoria Derbyshire ahead of the book’s October 21 release, confirmed possessing recordings of her four-year collaboration with Giuffre—completed before her April 25 suicide at 41. “Virginia named them all,” Wallace said, voice steady yet edged with urgency. “Prince Andrew 88 times, the ‘well-known prime minister’ rape, Epstein’s cameras for blackmail. The names are in the files—the FBI has them, DOJ has them. She knew.”
The studio—typically measured—hushed as Wallace added: “She insisted no redactions. This book is her final weapon.” Derbyshire pressed on Andrew’s title loss days earlier; Wallace replied: “It’s a start. Virginia would say: not enough.”
Giuffre’s memoir details grooming at 16 from Mar-a-Lago by Maxwell, trafficking by Epstein, and alleged assaults by elites. Wallace’s conviction—raw, unflinching—ignited calls for Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures (deadline December 19). The interview, viewed millions, trended #NamesInFiles with 3.5 million posts (78% demanding unredacted release).
As Wallace leaned forward, the hushed eruption mirrored a nation’s: Giuffre’s silenced truth, now thunder from beyond the grave.
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