In a heartbreaking turn that no one saw coming, Virginia Giuffre’s grieving loved ones made the courageous decision to share her raw, handwritten final words—penned shortly before her tragic suicide in April 2025. Discovered among her belongings, the note carries a powerful rallying cry: urging mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers to “show the battle lines are drawn” and stand united for victims of abuse, questioning if protests are the way forward but insisting “we’ve got to start somewhere.” This unfiltered revelation doesn’t just honor her lifelong fight against Epstein’s network; it forces the world to revisit the buried secrets of power and silence she battled until the end. Her family vows her voice will never be silenced. But with these words now echoing louder than ever, what long-hidden truths will finally surface?

In a heartbreaking yet courageous act, the family of Virginia Giuffre chose to share a handwritten note she penned shortly before her tragic suicide on April 25, 2025. Discovered among her personal journals at her farm in Western Australia, the raw message serves as a powerful call to action for survivors of abuse.
The note, shared publicly by her sister-in-law Amanda Roberts and brother Sky Roberts on social media, reads: “Mothers, Fathers, Sisters, and Brothers need to show the battle lines are drawn, and stand together to fight for the future of victims. Is protesting the answer? I don’t know. But we’ve got to start somewhere.” It continues with words of solidarity: “To all survivors and those protesting. We stand with you… We are not going to go away.”
The family released this excerpt after learning of a planned protest in Washington, D.C., on April 30—Denim Day, a day of awareness for sexual violence—organized in Giuffre’s honor by survivor groups. They emphasized that the note reflects her enduring commitment: “Her voice will not be silenced,” and her wish was for the fight against abuse to continue.
Virginia Giuffre, aged 41, was one of the most courageous voices in exposing Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking network. Recruited at 16 while working at Mar-a-Lago, she endured years of abuse before escaping, suing Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, and settling a lawsuit with Prince Andrew in 2022 (allegations he denies). She founded SOAR to support survivors and, posthumously, published her memoir Nobody’s Girl in October 2025.
Her death left three children and a grieving family. While she suffered long-term trauma from the abuse, compounded by recent personal struggles including a car accident and custody issues, her final shared words focus not on despair but on unity and action.
This unfiltered message honors her lifelong battle against the silence that protected powerful predators. It reminds the world of the ongoing cost of inaction and inspires continued advocacy. As her family vows, Giuffre’s voice echoes louder than ever, urging collective strength for victims everywhere. Her legacy as a fierce warrior endures, motivating survivors to keep fighting.
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