Amy Wallace, the award-winning journalist who collaborated closely with Virginia Giuffre on her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl, has revealed she possesses hours of private recordings that contain details Giuffre chose not to fully disclose in print—potentially explosive material that could further expose Jeffrey Epstein’s network of powerful associates.

Over four years, Wallace and Giuffre worked side-by-side, building a deep trust as they shaped the 400-page memoir published in October 2025. Giuffre, who died by suicide in April at age 41, insisted the book be released regardless of circumstances, providing raw accounts of her grooming at 16, trafficking by Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, and alleged abuse by figures including Prince Andrew. Yet Giuffre deliberately withheld certain names, fearing devastating lawsuits from the ultra-wealthy and influential.
In a revealing October 2025 interview on NewsNation’s Banfield, Wallace disclosed for the first time that she retains every recorded conversation with Giuffre—including sessions where specific powerful men were named. “I still have the tapes—every recorded conversation she had with me, including the ones in which Giuffre named names,” Wallace said. She emphasized that Giuffre provided these details to authorities years ago, with the information already in FBI and Department of Justice files.
Wallace stressed she is merely a “hired writer,” not the decision-maker on releases, but confirmed the recordings are securely hidden. “Nobody can find them, so don’t break into my house,” she warned, acknowledging risks from those desperate to suppress further revelations. She believes the FBI holds corroborating evidence, renewing calls for full unsealing of Epstein documents amid ongoing public pressure.
Giuffre’s memoir, while unflinching on key allegations—like three encounters with Prince Andrew and a brutal assault by an unnamed “well-known prime minister”—reflects her cautious choices. Wallace explained Giuffre weighed each scene: “She had to make a decision about whether or not she was going to name these people.” The withheld material underscores Giuffre’s lingering fear of retaliation, even as she fought for survivor justice through her nonprofit.
Wallace’s guardianship of these tapes preserves Giuffre’s unfiltered voice, a potential bombshell in the enduring quest for accountability. As Nobody’s Girl tops bestseller lists and reignites scrutiny of Epstein’s elite circle, the hidden recordings symbolize unfinished business: truths Giuffre entrusted to history, waiting for the day institutions finally prioritize victims over protectors.
Though Giuffre is gone, her collaboration with Wallace ensures her story—and its shadowed extensions—continues to challenge power’s darkest corners.
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