Virginia Louise Giuffre was an Australian and American advocate for survivors of sex trafficking and one of the most prominent accusers of Jeffrey Epstein
The shocking details around The Epstein Files continue to be dug deeper and as people are unearthing what all unfolded when the sexual offender Jeffrey Epstein was alive, they have discovered the name of Virginia Giuffre. Before we talk about what all she went through as per her own admission, here’s what you need to know about her.
Virginia Louise Giuffre was an Australian and American advocate for survivors of sex trafficking and one of the most prominent accusers of Jeffrey Epstein. Giuffre provided detailed allegations to media outlets about Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. She first alleged that Epstein ran a trafficking ring, outsourcing girls for sexual services to other powerful men, in 2011.
What Virginia Louise said
“This is not some sordid sex story, this is a story of being trafficked, this is a story of abuse, and this is a story of your guys’ royalty,” Virginia Giuffre told the BBC in an hour-long documentary that aired in November 2019.
She also told BBC that she was passed around Epstein’s rich and powerful friends like a platter of fruit. She said she was trafficked to
Prince Andrew three times in 2001 and 2002: once in London at the home of Epstein’s girlfriend, once at Epstein’s New York mansion and once on a private Caribbean island owned by Epstein.
“It didn’t last long,” she said of the first of three alleged encounters with the prince.
“He got up, and he said thanks, I sat there in bed, just horrified and ashamed and felt dirty,” Giuffre said. The advocate allegedly died by suicide last year in April but her father denied the allegations and stated ‘somebody got to her.’
Giuffre’ s siblings on Prince Andrew’s arrest
On behalf of our sister, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, we extend our gratitude to the U.K.’s Thames Valley Police for their investigation, and the arrest of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
The former Prince Andrew was arrested and held for hours by British police Thursday on suspicion of misconduct in public office related to his links to Jeffrey Epstein, an extraordinary move in a country where authorities once sought to shield the royal family from embarrassment.
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