From the grave, Virginia Giuffre’s voice still roars for justice. In her final, anguished wish—now laid bare in a searing public letter from her grieving family—Giuffre demanded that Ghislaine Maxwell never taste freedom again. “Imprisoned forever, just like the victims,” the family writes, channeling Virginia’s own unbreakable resolve. They slam Maxwell’s brazen bid for clemency as a cruel mockery of every girl she groomed, trafficked, and shattered.
Sky Roberts and Amanda Roberts pull no punches: Maxwell was no helpless accomplice—she was the architect, the predator who “trapped” children in a nightmare of control and abuse. As Maxwell dangles selective testimony before Congress while quietly pushing for mercy, the family refuses to let her rewrite history or escape full accountability.
Will Virginia’s dying plea finally bury Maxwell’s hopes of freedom—or will the powerful once again slip through the cracks?

From the grave, Virginia Giuffre’s voice still roars for justice. In her final, anguished wish—now laid bare in a searing public letter from her grieving family—Giuffre demanded that Ghislaine Maxwell never taste freedom again. “Imprisoned forever, just like the victims,” the family writes, channeling Virginia’s own unbreakable resolve. They slam Maxwell’s brazen bid for clemency as a cruel mockery of every girl she groomed, trafficked, and shattered.
Sky Roberts and Amanda Roberts pull no punches: Maxwell was no helpless accomplice—she was the architect, the predator who “trapped” children in a nightmare of control and abuse. As Maxwell dangles selective testimony before Congress while quietly pushing for mercy, the family refuses to let her rewrite history or escape full accountability.
Will Virginia’s dying plea finally bury Maxwell’s hopes of freedom—or will the powerful once again slip through the cracks?
Virginia Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein’s most prominent and courageous accusers, died by suicide on April 25, 2025, at the age of 41, on her farm in Neergabby, Western Australia. Her death sent shockwaves through the survivor community and beyond. Giuffre had been a relentless advocate, detailing her abuse starting at age 16, her grooming by Maxwell, and her trafficking to high-profile figures including Prince Andrew (allegations he has denied). Her civil lawsuits, testimony, and 2025 posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl played a pivotal role in exposing Epstein’s network, leading to his 2019 arrest and death, and Maxwell’s 2021 conviction on federal sex trafficking charges. Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in prison.
In February 2026, Maxwell appeared virtually from her minimum-security prison camp in Texas before the House Oversight Committee in a closed-door deposition tied to ongoing Epstein investigations. She repeatedly invoked her Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, refusing to answer questions. Her attorney, David Oscar Markus, stated that Maxwell was prepared to “speak fully and honestly” if granted clemency by President Donald Trump. She even offered to affirm that neither Trump nor Bill Clinton engaged in wrongdoing related to Epstein. Trump has publicly noted he is “allowed” to grant clemency but has said no formal request has been made and that he has not seriously considered it.
The Giuffre family responded with a powerful, unflinching open letter addressed directly to Maxwell, delivered to the committee ahead of or around the hearing and widely circulated. Written by Sky Roberts, Virginia’s brother, and his wife Amanda Roberts, it strips away any pretense of Maxwell as a passive participant. “Ghislaine Maxwell, you were not a bystander. You were not ‘misled,’” they wrote. “You were a central, deliberate actor in a system built to find children, isolate them, groom them, and deliver them to abuse.” Quoting Virginia, they described Maxwell as a “monster,” often more vicious than Epstein: “Epstein was Pinocchio and she was Geppetto. She was the guy controlling.”
The letter accuses Maxwell of weaponizing trust, exploiting vulnerabilities, and even using family ties—including threats involving Sky’s identity—to manipulate and control Virginia. It concludes with Virginia’s “last wishes”: “Ghislaine, you deserve to spend the rest of your life in a jail cell. Trapped in a cage forever just like you trapped your victims.” The family vows not to allow Maxwell’s crimes to be minimized, softened, or rewritten, demanding full accountability and rejecting any leniency.
This raw, grief-fueled statement has amplified calls for transparency and no clemency, warning that mercy would betray survivors and silence voices like Virginia’s. As Epstein files continue to surface and investigations persist, the Giuffre family’s plea stands as a defiant barrier against any attempt to rewrite the narrative. Virginia’s legacy endures through those who refuse to let justice falter, ensuring the powerful cannot escape scrutiny forever.
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