In her searing posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, published in October 2025, Virginia Giuffre delivers a devastating portrait of Prince Andrew as a man steeped in entitlement, behaving as though sexual access to her—a 17-year-old trafficking victim—was nothing less than his royal prerogative.

Giuffre recounts their first alleged encounter in March 2001 at Ghislaine Maxwell’s London townhouse. Maxwell, in a singsong voice, announced: “Just like Cinderella, I was going to meet a handsome prince!” At dinner, Andrew, then 41, correctly guessed Giuffre’s age as 17, noting his daughters were “just a little younger.” Maxwell quipped, “I guess we will have to trade her in soon.”
After a night at Tramp nightclub—where Giuffre recalls Andrew sweating profusely while dancing—they returned home. Maxwell instructed her: “When we get home, you are to do for him what you do for Jeffrey.” Giuffre describes running Andrew a bath before they had sex. Reflecting years later, she writes: “He was friendly enough, but still entitled—as if he believed having sex with me was his birthright.”
The next morning, Maxwell reportedly told her: “You did well. The prince had fun.” Epstein later paid Giuffre $15,000 for “servicing the man the tabloids called ‘Randy Andy.'”
Giuffre alleges two further encounters: one in New York and an “orgy” on Epstein’s Little St. James island involving Andrew, Epstein, herself, and about eight other young girls who appeared underage and spoke little English.
These unflinching details, co-written with journalist Amy Wallace before Giuffre’s suicide in April 2025 at age 41, underscore a pattern of elite impunity. Andrew settled Giuffre’s 2022 civil lawsuit with a substantial undisclosed sum—without admitting liability—and has always denied wrongdoing, stating he has no recollection of meeting her.
The memoir’s release intensified scrutiny, contributing to Andrew relinquishing remaining titles. Giuffre’s words expose not just personal violation but systemic power imbalances, where vulnerability was exploited as a perk of privilege. Her voice, preserved forever, demands accountability from the highest levels.
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