Virginia Giuffre’s grieving family unleashes a blistering response after Donald Trump claims Jeffrey Epstein “stole” her, calling the remark a cruel distortion of her lifelong battle for justice.

In July 2025, aboard Air Force One, President Trump told reporters that his falling-out with Epstein stemmed from the financier poaching young spa employees from Mar-a-Lago, explicitly stating Epstein “stole” Giuffre, a teenage attendant recruited by Ghislaine Maxwell in 2000. “He stole her,” Trump said, adding she had “no complaints about us, none whatsoever.”
Giuffre’s family—still mourning her April suicide at age 41—issued a scathing statement expressing shock and outrage. “It was shocking to hear President Trump invoke our sister and say that he was aware that Virginia had been ‘stolen’ from Mar-a-Lago,” they said. They rejected the characterization outright: “She wasn’t stolen—she was preyed upon at his property, at President Trump’s property. ‘Stolen’ seems very impersonal. It feels very much like an object, and the survivors are not objects.”
The family clarified that Maxwell, a convicted sex trafficker serving 20 years, targeted their 16-year-old sister years before Trump’s rift with Epstein. They questioned what Trump knew about Epstein and Maxwell’s crimes, citing his past comment that Epstein liked “women on the younger side… no doubt about it.”
Giuffre, Epstein’s most vocal accuser, helped dismantle his network, securing a multimillion-dollar settlement from Prince Andrew. Her family urged no leniency for Maxwell: “She is a monster who deserves to rot in prison.” They demanded answers and full transparency, insisting survivors deserve justice untainted by distortions.
Trump’s remarks, amid ongoing Epstein file releases, highlight lingering questions about elite ties—but Giuffre’s loved ones insist her story is one of predation, not poaching.
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