A hushed Western Australia courtroom fell silent in late November 2025 as Noah Giuffre, Virginia Giuffre’s 18-year-old son, presented evidence challenging an unsigned will draft, igniting a fierce legal battle over her multimillion-dollar estate seven months after her suicide.

Giuffre died on April 25, 2025, at age 41, leaving no signed will. Her sons, Christian (19) and Noah, sought administratorship of the estate—estimated at millions, including Andrew’s £12 million settlement and memoir royalties—in June filings. Opposing them: lawyer Karrie Louden and carer Cheryl Myers, claiming a February 2025 informal handwritten will naming them executors.
Noah and Christian argue Giuffre lacked capacity (citing medical records) and the draft’s validity fails due to Louden’s beneficiary status. A November 28 Supreme Court hearing appointed interim administrator Ian Torrington Blatchford, with further proceedings in 2026. Registrar Danielle Davies flagged joining Giuffre’s estranged husband Robert and minor daughter.
The family denied “missing millions” rumors, focusing on honoring Giuffre’s wishes for survivor causes. Public support trends #GiuffreEstate (70% backing sons), amid Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures.
Giuffre’s legacy—Nobody’s Girl exposing elite complicity—endures, her estate fight a final stand for control over her truth.
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