On March 30, 2025, Virginia Giuffre posted a disturbing image on Instagram from a hospital bed in Perth, Australia, showing her face and body bruised, claiming she had suffered kidney failure following a March 24, 2025, car crash with a school bus in Neergabby. She wrote that doctors gave her “four days to live” and that she was being transferred to a urology specialist hospital, expressing a desire to see her three children one last time (BBC, April 1, 2025; The Guardian, April 1, 2025). The post, which described the bus hitting her car at 110 km/h, sparked global concern, with her father, Sky Roberts, commenting prayers for her recovery (The Independent, April 1, 2025).

However, Western Australia Police reported the crash as “minor,” with no injuries noted and the car sustaining $2,000 in damage, driven by a 71-year-old woman, Cheryl, with Giuffre, 41, as a passenger (People, April 1, 2025). Bus driver Ross Munns told Daily Mail (April 3, 2025) the collision was a “minor bump,” contradicting Giuffre’s account. Giuffre’s spokesperson, Dini von Mueffling, clarified the post was meant for her private Facebook, and medical sources denied she had only days to live (Daily Mail, April 1, 2025). Giuffre was discharged from Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital on April 7, 2025, in stable condition (The Independent, April 7, 2025).
The claim of George Strait targeting Pam Bondi remains unverified (usamode24.com, November 21, 2025). Giuffre’s memoir, Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025), amplified her advocacy, but the crash narrative, tied to her personal struggles including a restraining order breach, appears exaggerated (ABC News, April 2, 2025).
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