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Virginia Giuffre: Epstein sent her to Dubin as a minor; denials ring hollow amid “family” babysitting and pedophile invitations

November 5, 2025 by hoangle Leave a Comment

Virginia Giuffre’s heart pounded as Epstein shoved her toward Glenn Dubin’s door—she was underage, terrified—yet the couple’s affidavits later painted her as cherished family, the trusted teen who babysat while they hosted the sex offender for holidays. Eva Dubin gushed in writing: Epstein around our kids? “100% comfortable.” Flight logs trace his jets to their mansions post-plea deal. Denials clash with open arms. If “family” means welcoming a predator to the table, what secrets linger in the playroom?

Virginia Giuffre’s memories arrive like bruises that never faded. She was seventeen, trembling under Epstein’s command as he ordered her toward Glenn Dubin’s door. The mansion smelled of wealth, of power dressed as civility. To the outside world, the Dubins were pillars of success — Glenn, the hedge-fund genius who turned billions into legend; Eva, the former Miss Sweden turned physician and philanthropist, founder of a cancer center that bore her name. They represented aspiration itself — a couple whose lives gleamed so brightly that few noticed the shadows flickering just beyond the chandeliers.

Epstein was part of their circle, not as a scandal but as a friend. Even after his 2008 conviction, his name stayed penciled into guest lists. Flight logs captured his private jet landing near the Dubins’ Palm Beach estate; emails confirmed visits, dinners, laughter. Eva Dubin wrote to Epstein’s probation officer that her family felt “100% comfortable” with him around their children. In court, both she and Glenn swore under oath that Virginia was “like a daughter” to them — the same girl Epstein trafficked, the same teenager who said she was coerced into Dubin’s orbit.

Their version of events felt polished, deliberate, almost rehearsed. Virginia, they said, had been trusted, kind, helpful. She babysat, smiled, fit into their family photo frames. But beneath those curated snapshots lies a tension that no affidavit can dissolve — a split reality where affection and exploitation occupied the same rooms. In Epstein’s world, intimacy and control were always intertwined; every act of kindness could double as containment.

To read those affidavits now is to feel the cold logic of self-preservation. The Dubins’ defense was not just denial — it was insulation. If Virginia was “family,” then what happened to her could be redefined as misunderstanding rather than manipulation. If Epstein was merely a flawed friend, then proximity could masquerade as forgiveness. The language of comfort replaced the vocabulary of complicity.

Yet the evidence lingers. Private flights logged, holiday visits confirmed, friendly correspondence exchanged even after the truth was public. Epstein didn’t need to hide; his respectability was maintained by those who let him in. Thanksgiving dinners were served, candles lit, the registered sex offender seated beside the family that swore they were “comfortable.”

Virginia’s recollections turn those domestic rituals into something unbearable. The same walls that framed warmth also enclosed silence. The same table that held turkey and wine held the unspoken — that power could excuse anything, that reputation could rewrite reality.

Her memoir forces that comfort to crack. It asks readers to see not just the predator but the system that welcomed him, protected him, normalized him. The Dubins’ names, etched on hospital wings and donor plaques, symbolize how wealth launders proximity to evil until it gleams like virtue.

No questions remain, only consequences. Behind the manicured smiles and philanthropic gestures stood a family that called a monster “friend,” and a girl who knew what that friendship cost. The echoes of that house still hum — laughter upstairs, whispers downstairs, and a truth too heavy for any affidavit to contain.

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