Noah Giuffre’s hands trembled in a hushed Western Australia courtroom on November 28, 2025, as he and brother Christian presented evidence challenging an unsigned handwritten will draft, igniting a fierce legal battle over their mother Virginia Giuffre’s multimillion-dollar estate seven months after her tragic suicide.

The Supreme Court hearing in Perth marked the first public airing of competing claims to Giuffre’s assets—estimated in the tens of millions from settlements with Jeffrey Epstein (2009) and Prince Andrew (2022 £12 million/AUD ~$24 million), plus memoir royalties from Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025). Christian (19) and Noah (18) seek administratorship, arguing Giuffre died intestate and lacked capacity for the February 2025 draft naming lawyer Karrie Louden and carer Cheryl Myers executors.
Registrar Danielle Davies appointed interim administrator Ian Torrington Blatchford, noting the draft’s validity hinges on Giuffre’s mental state and Louden’s beneficiary conflict. Robert Giuffre, estranged husband, may join proceedings, potentially claiming a third under intestacy laws.
Giuffre’s family denied “missing millions” rumors, focusing on honoring her survivor advocacy. The battle, amid Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures (deadline December 19), underscores her legacy’s stakes: truth beyond the grave, contested even in death.
Leave a Reply