Newly surfaced hidden chats coldly discussing the pricing of Russian girls for Jeffrey Epstein have intensified the chilling allegations from Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir, painting a more horrifying picture of the “orgy” she claims Prince Andrew joined on Epstein’s private island. In Nobody’s Girl, Giuffre describes her final encounter with Andrew on Little St. James not as isolated abuse, but as a group sex act involving Epstein, the prince, herself, and approximately eight other young girls—most appearing underage, non-English speaking, and easily exploitable. The secret messages, referencing costs and suitability for “J” (Epstein), deepen the exposure of the trafficking network. Prince Andrew has consistently denied all involvement and any wrongdoing.

In her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, released on October 21, 2025, Virginia Giuffre delivers a devastating final account of her alleged exploitation within Jeffrey Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation. Giuffre, who died by suicide in April 2025 at age 41 in Australia, describes three claimed sexual encounters with Prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the Duke of York (later stripped of royal titles amid renewed scrutiny). The prince has repeatedly and categorically denied all allegations of wrongdoing or any improper contact with Giuffre.
The memoir details the first encounter in London in March 2001, after Ghislaine Maxwell (convicted in 2021 of sex trafficking and serving 20 years) allegedly introduced Giuffre to the prince at a dinner with Epstein. Giuffre writes of being groomed for the meeting—like “Cinderella” meeting a “handsome prince”—followed by sex at Maxwell’s townhouse, after which Andrew reportedly thanked her. A second alleged incident occurred shortly after in New York.
The third and most harrowing, per Giuffre, took place on Epstein’s private Caribbean island, Little St. James (nicknamed “Little St. Jeff’s” by insiders). She describes it not as isolated abuse but as a group act: “It was an orgy. Epstein, Andy, and approximately eight other young girls, and I had sex together.” Giuffre emphasizes the vulnerability of the other participants, noting they “all seemed and appeared to be under the age of 18, and didn’t really speak English,” making them “the easiest girls to get along with” in Epstein’s view due to the communication barrier and exploitability. She recounts the island as a hub of systematic grooming and commodification of young women, many from non-English-speaking backgrounds.
These claims echo Giuffre’s earlier sworn statements, including a 2015 declaration and testimony in proceedings against Epstein (who died by suicide in 2019) and Maxwell. The book’s release amplified public outrage, contributing to pressure that led Prince Andrew to relinquish remaining royal honors.
Compounding the horror are newly surfaced details from Epstein-related files, including hidden chats and messages coldly discussing the “pricing” and suitability of young women—often from Eastern Europe, including Russian girls—for encounters. Some communications reference costs, scouting “girls” with measurements or attributes, and phrases like “good for J” (presumably Jeffrey Epstein), alongside offers to introduce figures like Prince Andrew to specific women (e.g., a 26-year-old Russian in 2010 emails). These exchanges expose the transactional, dehumanizing nature of the network, where vulnerability—youth, language barriers, economic desperation—was exploited for powerful men’s gratification.
Giuffre’s memoir, co-authored with journalist Amy Wallace and published by Alfred A. Knopf, stands as her unfiltered testimony, blending trauma with reflections on resilience, motherhood, and justice. It revives demands for accountability among Epstein’s associates and institutions that allegedly enabled or ignored the abuse.
Prince Andrew maintains his innocence, insisting he never engaged in any sexual activity with Giuffre and has no recollection of improper conduct. No criminal charges have resulted against him from these specific claims. The revelations continue to fuel debate over privilege, power imbalances, and the long shadow of Epstein’s crimes on survivors and society.
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