Emerging from the shadows of secret pricing chats coldly negotiating Russian girls for Jeffrey Epstein, Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir delivers a gut-wrenching exposé of the horrific orgy she alleges Prince Andrew participated in alongside Epstein and eight young girls. In Nobody’s Girl, released October 2025 after Giuffre’s suicide earlier that year, she describes her final alleged encounter on Little St. James island as a group sex act—not isolated abuse—where Epstein, Andrew, herself, and approximately eight other girls, most appearing underage and non-English speaking, were involved. Newly surfaced communications referencing costs and arrangements for young Russian women deepen the chilling portrait of exploitation. Prince Andrew has consistently denied all allegations of wrongdoing.

In her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, published October 21, 2025, by Alfred A. Knopf, Virginia Giuffre offers a searing, firsthand account of her alleged exploitation in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking network. Co-written with journalist Amy Wallace over four years, the book was released after Giuffre’s suicide on April 25, 2025, at age 41 in Western Australia, per her explicit wishes.
Giuffre details three alleged sexual encounters with Prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor (formerly the Duke of York), whom she calls “Andy.” The first occurred in London in March 2001, following an introduction by Ghislaine Maxwell (convicted in 2021 of sex trafficking and sentenced to 20 years) at a dinner with Epstein. Giuffre describes being groomed, likening it to “Cinderella” meeting a prince, before sex at Maxwell’s townhouse; Andrew reportedly thanked her afterward. A second alleged encounter followed in New York.
The third, portrayed as profoundly traumatic, unfolded on Epstein’s private island, Little St. James (“Little St. Jeff’s”). Giuffre writes: “It was an orgy. Epstein, Andy, and approximately eight other young girls, and I had sex together.” She highlights the victims’ vulnerability: “The other girls all appeared to be under the age of 18 and didn’t really speak English,” rendering them exploitable. Epstein allegedly remarked they were “the easiest girls to get along with” due to the language barrier. Giuffre claims the incident led to irregular bleeding and a miscarriage days later.
These allegations align with her prior sworn statements, including a 2015 declaration and testimony in cases against Epstein (who died by suicide in 2019) and Maxwell. The memoir’s publication heightened scrutiny, contributing to Andrew’s relinquishment of royal titles and honors.
Recent disclosures from Epstein-related files, including photos of estate items and screenshots of communications, intensify the narrative. Messages reference “$1000 per girl” in discussions of young women, often from Russia or Eastern Europe, with phrases like “good for J” (likely Jeffrey) and details on scouting, ages, measurements, and arrangements. One exchange mentions an 18-year-old Russian woman, underscoring the transactional, dehumanizing recruitment for Epstein’s network—leveraging youth, nationality, and desperation.
Giuffre’s book interweaves raw trauma with reflections on resilience, motherhood, and advocacy, portraying the island as a site of systematic abuse enabled by wealth and power. It calls for greater accountability from enablers and institutions.
Prince Andrew has consistently denied all allegations of wrongdoing, improper contact with Giuffre, or participation in sexual activity. He settled a civil lawsuit with her in 2022 without admitting liability. No criminal charges have been filed against him related to these claims. The revelations perpetuate intense debate over privilege, complicity, and justice in one of history’s most infamous abuse scandals.
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