Amy Wallace, co-author of Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice (released October 21, 2025), has spoken candidly about Prince Andrew’s future in light of the book’s revelations, calling his recent loss of titles a “victory” Giuffre would have celebrated.

In an October 20, 2025, BBC Newsnight interview with Victoria Derbyshire, Wallace stated: “I can speak for Virginia; I know that she would view it as a victory that he was forced, by whatever means, to voluntarily give them up.” She described Andrew’s October 17 relinquishment of his Duke of York title—followed by King Charles III’s October 30 revocation of all honors—as a “symbolic gesture” marking “modern history in the royal era,” yet “a step in the right direction.”
Wallace emphasized Giuffre’s intent for full accountability: “Virginia wanted all the men who she had been trafficked to, against her will, to be held to account.” The memoir, detailing three alleged assaults by Andrew at age 17, portrays him as “entitled,” believing sex with her was his “birthright.” Wallace urged Andrew to testify on Epstein’s crimes, noting he once indicated willingness to U.S. investigators but was “never available.”
Giuffre, who died by suicide April 25, 2025, at 41, completed the book insisting on unfiltered truth. Her family hailed Andrew’s exile as “a victory for Virginia.” With public support at 79% for his title removal (YouGov, October 2025), Wallace’s words underscore the memoir’s enduring impact: a survivor’s silenced truth now reshaping royal legacy.
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