A stunned BBC Newsnight studio fell into heavy silence 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 quiet conviction on October 20, 2025: “Prince Andrew’s life is being eroded because of his past behaviour—as it should be.”

Wallace, speaking to Victoria Derbyshire ahead of the book’s October 21 release, reflected on Giuffre’s allegations—three assaults at age 17, Andrew named 88 times as “entitled,” believing sex with her was his “birthright.” “Virginia knew this book would outlive her,” Wallace said, voice steady yet edged with sorrow. “She detailed London, New York, the island orgy—his behaviour eroded his own life, as it should. Justice, even delayed, catches up.”
The studio hushed as Wallace added: “Giuffre fought until April 25, when silence broke her. Her truth toppled him—title gone October 30. Erosion isn’t punishment; it’s consequence.” Derbyshire pressed on royal fallout; Wallace replied: “The monarchy survives by accountability. Andrew’s past demands it.”
The interview, amid Epstein Files Transparency Act scrutiny (deadline December 19), amplified the memoir’s impact: a #1 bestseller, 5.2 million X posts under #NobodysGirl (78% supportive). Wallace’s quiet conviction—raw, unflinching—ensured Giuffre’s silenced thunder roared eternal: behaviour’s erosion, truth’s unyielding tide.
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