Months after Virginia Giuffre’s tragic end, her teenage sons challenge an unsigned will in court, seeking to block her estranged husband from claiming a share of the multimillion-dollar fortune forged from Epstein and Prince Andrew settlements.

Virginia Giuffre, the prominent Epstein survivor who accused Prince Andrew of abuse (settled out of court in 2022 for a reported £12 million), died by suicide in April 2025 at age 41, leaving an estate potentially worth millions, including settlement remnants, properties, and memoir royalties from Nobody’s Girl.
Her adult sons, Christian (19) and Noah (18), filed in June 2025 to administer the intestate estate, with their father Robert Giuffre’s initial consent. Under Western Australian law, as estranged spouse, Robert could claim a lump sum plus one-third of the remainder.
The dispute escalated when Giuffre’s lawyer Karrie Louden and carer Cheryl Myers counterclaimed, presenting an informal unsigned document from February-April 2025 as her will, appointing them executors and allegedly excluding Robert. They insist no personal gain, only honoring Giuffre’s wishes amid separation and abuse allegations.
The sons reject the document’s validity, arguing Giuffre lacked mental capacity due to trauma and health issues. They deny it reflects her intentions, potentially allowing intestate distribution favoring children over spouse.
In November 2025 hearings at WA Supreme Court, an interim administrator was appointed. Discussions included joining Robert and minor daughter as parties; next hearing in 2026.
Giuffre’s US family supports excluding Robert, citing her late email expressing contrary wishes. The case highlights lingering pain from her advocacy, as battles over control extend to her charity and legacy.
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