A stunned 60 Minutes Australia crew tracked Virginia Giuffre to her remote Western Australian farm in 2019, years after she escaped Jeffrey Epstein’s predatory grip, her voice raw with the trauma that haunted her until her tragic suicide in April 2025 at 41.

In the episode aired July 21, 2019—titled “The Epstein Files”—reporter Liam Bartlett found Giuffre living quietly in Neergabby, north of Perth, with her husband Robert and three children, seeking anonymity after years in the spotlight. Surrounded by vast paddocks and simple rural life, Giuffre sat on her porch, eyes shadowed yet defiant, recounting her nightmare: recruited at 16 from Mar-a-Lago by Ghislaine Maxwell, groomed with promises of opportunity, then trafficked into Epstein’s empire of abuse.
“I was a sex slave,” she told Bartlett, voice trembling with remembered terror. “Epstein and Maxwell—they broke me, passed me to powerful men like property.” She detailed three alleged assaults by Prince Andrew at age 17—in London, New York, and on Little Saint James island—her pain still palpable. “They thought money and threats would silence me forever,” she said. “But I speak for every girl they hurt.”
The crew’s stunned silence mirrored viewers’: Giuffre’s rural refuge a stark contrast to Epstein’s gilded horror. Resurfaced amid her memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025) and Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures (completed December 19, no bombshells), the interview—raw, unflinching—ensured her voice, haunted yet unbroken, echoed eternal.
Giuffre’s farm escape—peace sought, trauma unrelenting—became her final sanctuary. Her truth, once raw on that porch, now thunders forever.
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