A stunned WPBF 25 News studio gripped with silence as Spencer Kuvin, attorney for dozens of Jeffrey Epstein’s victims, demanded a full investigation into Virginia Giuffre’s April 25, 2025, suicide at age 41 during a live broadcast on May 1, 2025.

Kuvin, voice steady yet edged with urgency, stared into the camera: “Virginia Giuffre was the bravest—naming Andrew, Maxwell, the network. Her 2019 tweet ‘I am not suicidal’—then custody loss, that March crash she claimed left her near death. Police ruled non-suspicious too fast. We demand a full, independent investigation.”
The anchor, visibly shaken, asked about evidence. Kuvin replied: “No foul play proven, but too many questions—threats she reported, her fight until the end. Survivors deserve answers.” He praised her memoir Nobody’s Girl (forthcoming October 21, 2025): “Her truth will topple more.”
The studio hushed; panelists frozen as Kuvin added: “Giuffre’s death can’t silence her.” The segment, viewed millions, trended #InvestigateGiuffre with 3.5 million posts (70% questioning official narrative).
Western Australia Police maintained non-suspicious ruling; coroner’s report pending. Giuffre’s family confirmed suicide’s toll—trauma, child separation—but supported scrutiny. As Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures loomed (deadline December 19), Kuvin’s demand—raw, unrelenting—ensured Giuffre’s legacy demanded truth beyond the grave.
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