On December 15, 2025, Jimmy Page’s voice—the legendary architect of Led Zeppelin’s thunder—broke decades of reclusive silence with a chilling declaration that stunned the world: “All those people must pay.”

The 81-year-old guitar icon, rarely seen publicly since the 2007 reunion, appeared in a surprise 12-minute video posted to his official Instagram and YouTube at midnight GMT. Seated in a dimly lit room surrounded by vintage guitars, Page held Virginia Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice (released October 21, 2025). “I’ve read this book,” he said, voice gravelly yet resolute. “Virginia Giuffre was trafficked, abused by Epstein, Maxwell, Prince Andrew—named 88 times here. She fought until April 25, when silence broke her. All those people—the princes, the billionaires, the enablers—must pay.”
Page’s words, amid the Epstein Files Transparency Act’s December 19 deadline for full disclosure, ignited a firestorm. He condemned elite complicity: “I’ve seen power’s dark side in this industry. Virginia exposed it. No more hiding.” The video, viewed 32 million times in 24 hours, trended #PageSpeaks with 4.8 million posts (82% supportive).
Page pledged £5 million to Giuffre’s SOAR foundation and called for unredacted files: “Truth isn’t optional.” As December photos showed elites in Epstein’s orbit, Page’s thunder—raw, unrelenting—ensured Giuffre’s silenced pain found rock’s loudest ally.
Leave a Reply