A single 2019 tweet—“I am not suicidal… if something happens to me, don’t let it go”—resurfaced like a ghost when Virginia Giuffre died by suicide at 41 on April 25, 2025, igniting a storm of conspiracy theories that her death was no accident.

Giuffre posted the message on December 11, 2019, amid threats following her accusations against Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and Prince Andrew: “I am making it publicly known that in no way, shape or form am I suicidal… If something happens to me—in the sake of my family do not let this go away and help me to protect them. Too many evil people want to see me quieted.”
Her death at her Neergabby farm in Western Australia—ruled non-suspicious by police, with a coroner’s report pending—immediately revived the tweet, shared millions of times. Her father, Sky Roberts, rejected suicide on Piers Morgan Uncensored (May 1, 2025): “Somebody got to her.” Theories linked it to Epstein’s 2019 jail suicide, her March 2025 “minor” car crash she claimed left her near death, and custody battles barring her from her children.
No evidence supports foul play. The family confirmed suicide, citing the “unbearable toll” of lifelong abuse. Yet the tweet’s prescience—paired with her memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025) exposing elite complicity—fueled speculation. With 4.2 million X posts under #NotSuicidal, Giuffre’s warning endures: a digital epitaph demanding scrutiny of the powerful she challenged.
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