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In the final pages she penned before her tragic death, Virginia Giuffre vows her unfiltered truth will outlive her—exposing the intimate, coerced encounters with Prince Andrew that the royal has fought desperately to bury through settlements, denials, and decades of palace protection.T

January 1, 2026 by henry Leave a Comment

Even in death, Virginia Giuffre’s voice refuses to be silenced. Her memoir, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, published posthumously in October 2025 following her tragic suicide in April at age 41, delivers the unflinching account she carried for over two decades. At its core are detailed descriptions of three alleged sexual encounters with then-Prince Andrew in 2001, when she was just 17 and under the control of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.

Giuffre writes that the first encounter took place in Ghislaine Maxwell’s London townhouse after a night at Tramp nightclub—the evening immortalized by the photograph showing Andrew’s arm around her waist. She describes being instructed to “do for Andrew what I do for Jeffrey,” recounting an intimate bath, foot attention, and intercourse that lasted less than thirty minutes. Epstein later paid her $15,000 and praised her compliance.

The second alleged assault occurred weeks later in Epstein’s New York mansion, where Giuffre felt trapped with no realistic means of escape. The third, she claims, unfolded on Little Saint James during what she described as an “orgy” involving Andrew, Epstein, herself, and several other young girls who appeared underage and unable to speak English.

Andrew has always categorically denied any sexual contact or recollection of meeting Giuffre. He settled her 2021 civil lawsuit in 2022 for an undisclosed sum without admitting liability. Yet the memoir’s raw testimony—supported by flight logs, witness statements, and the London photograph—has intensified scrutiny in the months since publication.

Released amid King Charles III’s October 2025 decision to formally strip Andrew of all remaining royal titles and styles, the book has been hailed by Giuffre’s family as her final act of courage. For Andrew, now living as a private citizen facing eviction from Royal Lodge, the memoir ensures that the encounters he has spent years attempting to consign to the past remain inescapably public. Giuffre’s words stand as a lasting challenge to power, privilege, and denial.

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