
Virginia Giuffre: Everything to Know About Her Life Before Her Tragic Death at 41
Virginia Giuffre became famous for taking on some of the biggest names in Hollywood and a royal in pursuit of justice for the crimes they perpetrated against her.
Virginia Giuffre is known for accusing Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, his co-conspirator, of recruiting her into their predatory ring. She also sued Prince Andrew for sexual assault. Although Virginia has since passed away, there was much more to her than what the public knew.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre during an interview in New York on August 29, 2019 | Source: Getty Images
Who Is Virginia Giuffre?
Born Virginia Louise Roberts, later known as Virginia Giuffre, she was welcomed on August 9, 1983, in Sacramento. Her parents were Lynn and Sky Roberts. When she was four years old, the family relocated to Palm Beach County, where her father worked as a maintenance manager at Mar-a-Lago, President Donald Trump’s resort in Palm Beach, Florida.
After being molested by a close family friend until the age of seven, Virginia ran away from home. Over the next few years, she lived in foster homes, stayed with an aunt in California, and spent time in the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood of San Francisco, a former hippie haven.

Sarah Ransome, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, and Marijke Chartouni at a court hearing for Jeffrey Epstein on August 27, 2019 | Source: Getty Images
At 14, Virginia lived on the streets and spent six months with a 65-year-old sex trafficker who abused her. Compared to living on the streets or earning $9 an hour during her summer job at Mar-a-Lago, Epstein’s upcoming offer seemed far more enticing.
How Virginia Became Famous
In 2009, Virginia, identified then as Jane Doe 102, made headlines when she sued Epstein. She accused him and British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell of recruiting her into Epstein’s sex-trafficking ring when she was a minor. He had promised her a chance to become a professional masseuse.
During interviews and depositions, Virginia said she was recruited in 2000 while working as a locker room attendant at Mar-a-Lago. She recalled reading a massage therapy manual when Maxwell approached her, offering an opportunity to become Epstein’s traveling masseuse.

A handout by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement of Jeffrey Epstein posing for a sex offender mugshot after being charged with procuring a minor for prostitution on July 25, 2013, in Florida | Source: Getty Images
Epstein offered her $200 for massages several times a day, an offer that, as Nigel Cawthorne wrote in his 2022 book, “Virginia had determined for herself she could not refuse.” Virginia claimed the pair instead groomed her to perform sexual services for wealthy men.
Speaking to a publication in 2019, she shared that she was “passed around like a platter of fruit” to Epstein’s friends and traveled the world on private jets. At age 19, in 2002, she tried to escape by asking him to fund her enrollment at the International Training Massage School in Thailand.

Virginia Giuffre holding a photo of herself as a teenager when she says she was abused by Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, and Prince Andrew, among others in 2023 | Source: Getty Images
Epstein agreed on the condition that she would recruit a young local girl there and bring her back to the US. However, while in Thailand, Virginia met Robert Giuffre, an Australian martial arts instructor. They married ten days later, allowing her to escape Epstein’s grip.
When she called Epstein to say she would not return or bring back a new victim, he allegedly said, “Have a nice life,” and hung up. Virginia and Robert went on to welcome three children: Christian, Noah, and Emily.

Virginia Giuffre and her children pose together in a post dated March 22, 2025 | Source: Instagram/virginiarobertsrising11
The family moved between Australia, Colorado, and Florida before settling in Perth in 2020. In 2007, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) contacted Virginia during their investigation into Epstein, but she refused to cooperate out of fear.
In a 2019 interview, she explained that giving birth to her daughter Emily in 2010 motivated her to go public about her assaults. She also revealed why she initially agreed to work with Epstein and Maxwell.
Virginia said, “They seemed like nice people,” adding, “so I trusted them, and I told them I’d had a really hard time in my life up until then — I’d been a runaway, I’d been sexually abused, physically abused. That was the worst thing I could have told them, because now they knew how vulnerable I was.”
In 2015, she became the first Epstein victim to give up her anonymity and share her story publicly. She sold her account to The Mail on Sunday, a British tabloid. In Cawthorne’s book, she recalled, “Basically, I was training to be a [sex worker] for him and his friends who shared his interest in young girls.”
“Ghislaine told me that I have to do for Andrew what I do for Jeffrey,” she added. That same year, she sued Maxwell for defamation after being called a liar, and two years later, they settled for an undisclosed sum.
Virginia also accused Epstein and Maxwell of forcing her to sleep with Prince Andrew, the Duke of York. The prince denied the allegations, but he stepped down from royal duties in 2019.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre at a news conference following a hearing in Manhattan Federal Court on August 27, 2019, in New York | Source: Getty Images
That same year, Epstein, a multimillionaire financier, was arrested and charged with sex trafficking and conspiracy. He was accused of soliciting teenage girls to perform massages that escalated into sexual acts. Federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York brought the charges against him.
Barely a month after Epstein’s arrest—and a day after documents from Virginia’s successful defamation lawsuit were released—he was found dead in his cell at the Metropolitan Correctional Center.

Jeffrey Epstein at the launch of Radar Magazine at Hotel QT on May 18, 2005 | Source: Getty Images
He died by hanging at age 66 in Lower Manhattan, and his death was ruled a suicide. In 2021, Maxwell was convicted of sex trafficking and other offenses and sentenced to 20 years in prison. After Epstein’s death, Virginia continued her legal fight against Prince Andrew.

The Duke of York and his private secretary Amanda Thirsk at the Royal Hospital in Chelsea, London, on May 20, 2019 | Source: Getty Images
Going After a Royal
In 2021, Virginia sued Prince Andrew, alleging he sexually assaulted her at Maxwell’s London home and Epstein’s properties in Manhattan and Little St. James, in the Virgin Islands. A photograph showing Andrew with his arm around her waist was widely published.
Although the British royal claimed he had no memory of the occasion, he eventually agreed to settle the lawsuit. The following year, Andrew issued a statement praising Virginia for speaking out and pledged to “demonstrate his regret” for his association with Epstein “by supporting the fight against the evils of sex trafficking, and by supporting its victims.”

Prince Andrew, Duke of York, seen leaving St. Giles Cathedral on September 12, 2022, in Edinburgh, Scotland | Source: Getty Images
The 2022 out-of-court New York settlement awarded money to Virginia and her charity, now called Speak Out, Act, Reclaim. It was worth over $16 million or £12 million. However, the agreement did not admit liability.
Sadly, Virginia’s fight for justice came to a tragic end after she was involved in a deadly car crash and exposed troubling issues in her marriage
What Virginia Experienced Months Before Her Death
In late March 2025, Virginia posted a shocking image on Instagram, showing herself bruised and battered while lying in a hospital bed. She revealed she had nearly died after the car she was in was struck by a school bus traveling over 49 mph.
She stated, “I’ve gone into kidney renal failure.” Virginia explained that doctors gave her only four days to live, and she had been transferred to a specialist hospital in urology. However, according to a report, police contradicted her claims, stating that the car accident was only a “minor crash” with no serious injuries reported.
Meanwhile, sources close to Virginia said her post was a “mistake.” Soon after, she made serious allegations against her husband of 22 years, claiming he had abused her.
In a statement, she admitted, “I was able to fight back against Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein, who abused and trafficked me. But I was unable to escape the domestic violence in my marriage until recently. After my husband’s latest physical assault, I can no longer stay silent.”
According to Virginia’s representative, she reported an assault on January 9, 2025, to police in Dunsborough, Western Australia. However, her husband was not charged at the time.
Virginia’s brother, Sky Roberts, alleged that Robert assaulted her during a family trip to celebrate one of their children’s birthdays. The attack was reportedly so severe that Virginia suffered a cracked sternum, a perforated eye, and other injuries.

One of Virginia Giuffre’s children posing in a tree | Source: Instagram/virginiarobertsrising11
Her spokeswoman said she had to be hospitalized for her injuries. In February 2025, Robert shocked her family when he allegedly retaliated by taking out a restraining order against her.
He filed a family violence restraining order, claiming that she had become violent toward him. “He just put his in place first,” Sky explained. “He beat her to the punch. And so, now, she’s on the defense,” he added.
The restraining order granted him primary custody of their children and barred Virginia from contacting them. The order prevented her from seeing her three children, aged 19, 16, and 15, until June. The situation took a heavy toll on her.
Her brother stated, “At the end of the day, her kids are the most important thing in her life. She loves those babies.” On February 2, Robert accused Virginia of breaching the restraining order by texting him, though she denied the claim.
On April 3, 2025, Sky said, “It’s the worst pain in the world to not have access to your children.” He added, “Can you imagine the pain? I will tell you, all the physical (pain) will never amount to the pain of being separated from your children in that way.”

One of Virginia Giuffre’s sons posing with a dog | Source: Instagram/virginiarobertsrising11
In an emailed statement, her husband’s attorney said, “Unfortunately, as the issues you raise are before the Courts in Australia, both he and anyone associated with the case, including Ms Giuffre or her agents, are prohibited from discussing or utilizing the media. Therefore, there is no comment.”

Virginia Giuffre’s children posing together | Source: Instagram/virginiarobertsrising11
In March 2025, Virginia shared a carousel of pictures of her children on Instagram, expressing her deep love for them. She noted that they “don’t know how much I love them” because “they’re being poisoned with lies.” Virginia also confessed how much she missed them.

Virginia Giuffre posing with one of her sons | Source: Instagram/virginiarobertsrising11
“I have been through hell & back in my 41 years but this is incredibly hurting me worse than anything else. Hurt me, abuse me but don’t take my babies. My heart is shattered and every day that passes my sadness only deepens 😔 [sic],” she wrote.
Sky and Amanda, her sister-in-law, revealed that Virginia and Robert had been experiencing marital issues for a while and had separated around August 2023. However, in November 2023, Virginia celebrated her husband on Instagram, writing, “My hubby, best friend, lover, father of our children and [sic] the greatest man I know ♥️.”
The following month, she marked their anniversary with a throwback post captioned, “Me & my happily ever after 🌷21 years ago this amazing man rescued me from Epstein & Maxwell’s clutches. I thank God everyday [sic] for putting this beautiful man in my life! 🦋I love you Robbie G 🔥🔥❤️❤️🌟🌟.”
Her family remained uncertain whether her medical condition resulted from the car crash, complications from a recent alleged assault, or a combination of both. Sadly, Virginia died by suicide a few months after filing her assault report.
How Virginia Died
On April 24, 2025, two days after her passing, Virginia’s family announced that she had died at the farm where she had lived for several years in Neergabby, outside Perth, Australia. She was 41 years old. Her sister-in-law spoke about the devastating loss.
Amanda mourned, “The world lost a fierce warrior.” Having spent most of her life fighting for justice for herself and other sexual abuse survivors, “She wished for all survivors to get justice. That is who she was.”
Through tears, Amanda said, “We lost our sister,” emphasizing that Virginia’s children lost a parent and her mother lost a daughter. She continued, “That’s where we are now. She was one of the most beautiful souls you would ever have the chance to meet,” and added, “But I think sometimes, that load and that weight becomes too much to carry.”
Shelby Brady, media liaison officer for the Western Australia Police Force, revealed that emergency services responded to a residence in Neergabby and found an unresponsive 41-year-old woman. They performed first aid, but she was declared dead at the scene.
Authorities stated that “early indications” suggest “the death is not suspicious,” although Major Crime detectives are continuing their investigation. Amanda confirmed that Virginia’s brother was staying with her at the time.
Virginia is survived by her husband, their three children, her mother, and her two brothers, Sky and Danny Wilson. She will be remembered by the words she wrote on her Instagram profile: “Pursuit of justice doesn’t stop with Epstein-the elites who trafficked me and so many others are going down—the house of cards will begin to fall. 🦋victimsrefusesilence.org.”
Virginia’s advocacy work left a lasting impact. Through her story and efforts, she shed light on the dark realities of human trafficking and abuse, inspiring many survivors to come forward.
Although her life was tragically cut short, her courage and determination will continue to influence the fight against exploitation and injustice. Her memory lives on through the survivors she empowered and the change she helped ignite.