In her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, published in October 2025, Virginia Giuffre delivers a bombshell that reverberates through international corridors of power. For the first time, Giuffre explicitly names former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak as one of her abusers in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking network, accusing him of savagely raping her on Epstein’s private island, Little St. James, in 2002. This revelation, coming six months after her suicide at age 41, demands urgent answers and accountability from global leaders.

Giuffre, recruited at 16 by Ghislaine Maxwell while working at Mar-a-Lago, describes being trafficked to Barak in a secluded cabana. Then 18, she recounts the assault in graphic detail: Barak allegedly choked her until she blacked out, beat her, and laughed as she begged for mercy, leaving her bloodied and traumatized. “He raped me more savagely than anyone had before,” she writes, adding that the encounter aroused him further through her pain. Epstein’s dismissive response: “You’ll get that sometimes.” A second meeting occurred aboard the Lolita Express, though less violent.
Barak, who served as Israel’s Prime Minister from 1999 to 2001 and has ties to Epstein documented in flight logs and photos, has vehemently denied the allegations, calling them “baseless smears” in a statement. His visits to Epstein’s properties and multiple flights on the jet have long fueled speculation, but Giuffre’s naming pierces the veil of denial. In earlier depositions, she referenced meeting Barak but stopped short of full accusation due to fears of retaliation; the memoir, completed before her death, breaks that silence.
This accusation pierces global politics, implicating intelligence ties—Epstein’s rumored Mossad connections—and raising questions about Barak’s post-premiership activities. As a defense minister and Labor Party leader, Barak’s legacy now faces scrutiny amid calls for investigations in Israel and the U.S. Advocacy groups, including those Giuffre founded like SOAR, demand probes, echoing her brother’s pleas for unredacted Epstein files.
Giuffre’s words expose a web of impunity: powerful men preying on vulnerability without consequence. Her death—amid personal battles and threats—mirrors Epstein’s mysterious end, leaving shadows. Yet her final revelations insist on truth: no one, not even prime ministers, is above justice. As December 2025 file releases continue, Giuffre’s voice commands answers, challenging nations to confront complicity.
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