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In a tear-streaked interview decades after the trauma, a woman once silenced by fear and power finally speaks out, detailing how a prominent figure—who shaped her early ambitions—allegedly groomed and sexually abused her as a vulnerable teenager, shattering her trust in the very world that promised opportunity.T

December 23, 2025 by henry Leave a Comment

In a revelation that has stunned readers and reopened old wounds, Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, published in October 2025, details allegations of sexual abuse beginning when she was just seven years old—at the hands of her own father, a figure who held immense power over her young life.

Giuffre, who became one of the most courageous voices against Jeffrey Epstein and his enablers, tragically died by suicide in April 2025 at age 41. The book, completed before her death with co-author Amy Wallace, breaks decades of partial silence on her earliest traumas. While Giuffre had previously spoken of abuse by a family friend and later by Epstein starting at age 16, this is the first time she publicly accused her father, Sky Roberts, of repeated rape and molestation in their family home.

“I was abused by my own father,” Giuffre writes, describing how the betrayal shaped her vulnerability. She portrays these early experiences as grooming her into the “perfect victim” for predators like Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, who recruited her as a teenager at Mar-a-Lago. The memoir suggests her father may have accepted payments from Epstein to stay silent, an allegation he vehemently denies.

Roberts has rejected the claims, insisting he never harmed his daughter. Family reactions are divided: Giuffre’s brother, Sky Roberts Jr., emotionally confirmed confronting their father, saying, “We know… you sexually abused your daughter.” Another sibling expressed longstanding suspicions, noting Virginia’s intent to “save the best for last.”

This accusation, emerging six months after her death, underscores the layered horrors Giuffre endured. Known for suing Prince Andrew (settled in 2022) and helping convict Maxwell, she framed her life as a chain of abuses—from childhood betrayal to elite trafficking. Wallace emphasizes: “Victims of sexual trafficking are not born; they are made” by such foundational traumas.

The memoir’s release coincides with ongoing Epstein file disclosures in December 2025, reminding the world of systemic failures. Giuffre’s words amplify a grim truth: power imbalances in families can devastate as profoundly as those among the elite. Her voice, though silenced in life, now echoes louder, urging accountability for abuses hidden closest to home.

As debates rage over her estate and legacy, this new chapter forces reflection on how early silence enables later exploitation. Giuffre’s courage in naming her “original betrayer” ensures her story challenges not just famous predators, but the intimate ones who start the cycle.

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