In her posthumous memoir, Virginia Giuffre unflinchingly recounts the sexual abuses inflicted by Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and Prince Andrew, exposing an entitlement that treated her vulnerability as their rightful claim.
Published in October 2025 as Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, Virginia Giuffre’s raw testimony—completed before her suicide in April at age 41—lays bare the predatory world of Jeffrey Epstein. Recruited at 16 by Ghislaine Maxwell while working at Mar-a-Lago, Giuffre describes her rapid descent into exploitation. Maxwell and Epstein’s first sexual assault on her occurred during what she believed was a massage session, with Maxwell undressing her and both abusing her. “The disappointment was excruciating,” Giuffre writes, blaming herself initially.
Epstein subjected her t
o sadomasochistic acts, leaving her fearing she might “die a sex slave.” Trafficked to powerful men, Giuffre details being “loaned out” as property, her youth and trauma weaponized against her.
Central to the memoir are allegations against Prince Andrew, whom Giuffre claims abused her three times starting at 17. Their first encounter in March 2001 followed Maxwell’s Cinderella-like promise of meeting a “handsome prince.” Andrew correctly guessed her age as 17, noting his daughters were slightly younger, while Maxwell joked about “trading her in soon.” After a night at Tramp nightclub—where Andrew sweated profusely—they returned to Maxwell’s London home for sex.
Giuffre portrays Andrew as “friendly enough, but still entitled—as if he believed having sex with me was his birthright.” The next morning, Maxwell praised her performance; Epstein paid her generously. Further encounters allegedly occurred in New York and on Epstein’s island in an “orgy” involving Epstein, Andrew, and eight other young girls, many underage and non-English speaking.
Andrew has always denied the allegations, settling Giuffre’s 2022 lawsuit without admission of liability. Yet her memoir underscores a pattern: powerful men viewing vulnerable girls as entitlements, shielded by wealth and status.
Giuffre’s childhood molestation and early traumas made her an ideal target, illustrating how predators exploit fragility. Though trauma ultimately claimed her life, her words demand accountability, exposing how entitlement enabled systemic abuse.
Nobody’s Girl immortalizes Giuffre’s courage, forcing confrontation with predators who treated survivors’ pain as privilege. Her legacy endures, amplifying voices long silenced.
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