On December 14, 2025, Oracle founder Larry Ellison’s voice—usually a calculated whisper in Silicon Valley boardrooms—thundered across a 17-minute livestream from his Lanai estate, his eyes blazing as he clutched Virginia Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice. “Every page is worth two million dollars,” the 81-year-old billionaire declared, slamming the book on his desk. “Read it, Bondi.”

The unscripted broadcast, streamed on X to 12.4 million viewers, targeted Attorney General Pam Bondi, whom Ellison accused of “deliberate obstruction” in withholding unredacted Epstein files under the Transparency Act’s December 19 deadline. “You’re protecting the powerful while survivors bleed,” he roared, flipping to Giuffre’s passage on Prince Andrew’s alleged “birthright” entitlement. “This woman fought alone. Her truth is here—400 pages of courage. And you’re redacting it?”
Ellison, whose past Epstein ties—dinners and island visits—surfaced in the December 12 photo release, preempted criticism: “I was wrong to associate with him. I didn’t know the depths. But now I do—and silence is complicity.” He pledged $100 million to Giuffre’s SOAR foundation and survivor legal funds, challenging fellow billionaires: “Match me, or explain why not.”
The livestream, trending #EllisonForGiuffre with 4.2 million posts (78% supportive), stunned tech circles. Bondi’s office called it “grandstanding”; the White House dismissed it as “Hollywood theater.” Yet Ellison’s fury—raw, unfiltered—amplified Giuffre’s legacy, turning a titan’s whisper into a roar for accountability as the files’ deadline loomed.
Leave a Reply