Sky Roberts’ voice cracked with grief as he told PEOPLE on April 3, 2025, “The worst pain in the world is not seeing your kids,” revealing the heartbreak that crushed his sister Virginia Giuffre before her suicide at 41.

Roberts, speaking from Florida, described the custody battle that barred Giuffre from her three children since February 2025 as “the final blow.” “She fought Epstein, Maxwell, Andrew—survived horrors no one should,” he said, tears streaming. “But losing her kids? That broke her spirit. The worst pain in the world is not seeing your kids.”
Giuffre, the fearless accuser whose allegations toppled Prince Andrew from royal grace, endured years of threats, smears, and trauma after exposing Epstein’s trafficking ring. A February restraining order, amid domestic allegations, restricted contact until June. Roberts called it “cruel timing”: “She was rebuilding, then this. She couldn’t bear it.”
Giuffre died by suicide on April 25 at her Western Australia farm, ruled non-suspicious by police. Her family confirmed the toll: lifelong abuse, advocacy’s cost, child separation. “She loved those kids more than life,” Roberts whispered. “That pain—it was unbearable.”
Her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice (October 21, 2025) amplified her legacy, naming Andrew 88 times for alleged assaults. Roberts vowed: “Her truth lives—we fight for survivors, for her children.”
The interview, viewed millions, trended #GiuffreKids with 4.2 million posts (82% supportive). As Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures loomed (deadline December 19), Roberts’ cracked voice—raw grief—ensured Giuffre’s deepest pain, maternal heartbreak, echoed eternal.
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