
Epstein Victim Names ‘Well-Known Prime Minister’ In Stunning Memoir
The memoir of a woman whose allegations helped expose Jeffrey Epstein’s global sex-trafficking network will be released soon, and intriguing details from the text are already emerging.
Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, promises to pull back the veil on the “well-known prime minister” she says brutalized her—and the layers of complicity surrounding that abuse.
In the book, Giuffre writes of a terrifying incident: trapped in the house of a powerful politician, she begged Epstein for help as the man attacked her. “After the attack, I couldn’t stay a fool,” she reflects. “Epstein’s callous reaction to how terrified I felt made it clear that he was simply a manipulator.” For Giuffre, that sequence underscored not just the physical danger she endured, but the psychological torture inflicted by those meant to protect her.
Giuffre, who for years fought to hold Epstein and his high-profile associates accountable, was found dead in April in what authorities ruled a suicide. Her death sent shockwaves through a case that already revealed staggering levels of power, privilege, and corruption.
Giuffre identifies the assailant only as the “Prime Minister,” citing fear of retaliation. Yet in previous court filings she named former Israeli leader Ehud Barak—which he continues to deny. The evasions by figures of power painfully illustrate the systemic walls survivors face.
She doesn’t mince words: the politician whom she alleges attacked her “repeatedly choked me until I lost consciousness and took pleasure in seeing me in fear for my life.” In the same moment, Epstein is recast not as rescuer but as bystander—“simply a manipulator”—whose indifference illuminated his and his network’s true role.
Giuffre portrays Epstein as chilled to her suffering, telling her after the assault, in effect: “That’s part of the job.” The memoir suggests this trauma wasn’t incidental—it was structural, embedded in a system of rich and influential enablers.
Finally, Nobody’s Girl stands as both reckoning and testimony—not only revealing brutality, but demanding accountability from the highest tiers of society. With Giuffre gone, the weight of her story lingers.
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