The billionaire who rarely speaks publicly stepped into the spotlight—and the room seemed to freeze.
In a raw, 17-minute livestream that left Silicon Valley and Washington reeling, Oracle founder Larry Ellison abandoned his legendary cool reserve. Voice steady but edged with fury, he stared straight into the camera and issued a direct challenge to former Attorney General Pam Bondi: “Read Virginia Giuffre’s memoir. Every single page. If you do, you’ll see why I’m putting $100 million behind this truth—two million dollars per page of courage, pain, and proof the system tried to bury.”
Ellison, visibly moved after finishing Nobody’s Girl just hours earlier, called Giuffre’s posthumous account “the most expensive silence ever purchased.” Then came the bombshell: he’s ready to fund investigators, lawyers, and whistleblowers to expose what Bondi and others allegedly ignored.
The elite just got served notice—and the clock is ticking.

The billionaire who rarely speaks publicly stepped into the spotlight—and the room seemed to freeze.
On the evening of January 11, 2026, Oracle founder Larry Ellison, known for his calculated reserve and formidable presence in tech and philanthropy, abandoned his legendary cool in a raw, 17-minute livestream that left Silicon Valley, Washington, and survivor networks reeling. Voice steady but edged with uncharacteristic fury, he stared directly into the camera, addressing former Attorney General Pam Bondi by name.
“Read Virginia Giuffre’s memoir. Every single page,” Ellison commanded. “If you do, you’ll see why I’m putting $100 million behind this truth—two million dollars per page of courage, pain, and proof the system tried to bury.”
Ellison had just finished Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, the posthumous account by Virginia Giuffre, published in October 2025 by Alfred A. Knopf. The #1 New York Times bestseller, co-authored with journalist Amy Wallace, details Giuffre’s grooming at 16 by Ghislaine Maxwell at Mar-a-Lago, years of trafficking by Jeffrey Epstein, and encounters with powerful figures—including allegations against Prince Andrew and others—while exposing institutional failures that shielded perpetrators. Giuffre, who died by suicide on April 25, 2025, at age 41 in Western Australia after a lifetime of trauma, advocacy, and relentless pursuit of justice, had insisted the book be released regardless of her fate.
Ellison called the memoir “the most expensive silence ever purchased,” a searing indictment of the elite protections that allowed Epstein’s network to thrive for decades. Visibly moved, he announced he was committing $100 million to fund independent investigators, lawyers, whistleblower support, and legal efforts to unearth what he alleged Bondi and other officials had ignored or delayed in the Epstein files saga.
The pledge comes amid intense scrutiny of the Justice Department’s handling of Epstein-related documents. Despite the Epstein Files Transparency Act—passed with near-unanimous bipartisan support and signed into law in late 2025—requiring full disclosure by December 19, 2025, the DOJ has released only partial tranches, citing redactions for victim protection and ongoing probes. Critics, including lawmakers like Reps. Ro Khanna and Thomas Massie, have accused the department of stonewalling, with threats of inherent contempt charges against Bondi for non-compliance. Millions of pages remain unreleased, fueling outrage and conspiracy theories as the saga stretches into 2026.
Ellison’s announcement amplified those demands. “This isn’t charity—it’s accountability,” he stated. “Virginia fought alone until she couldn’t. No more delays. No more shields for the untouchable.” The funds would support FOIA litigation, private forensic reviews of seized materials from Epstein’s properties, and resources for survivors seeking justice.
The elite just got served notice. Shockwaves rippled through legal circles, where experts called the pledge a potential game-changer for stalled probes. Survivor advocates hailed it as a powerful amplification of Giuffre’s legacy, turning private grief into a formidable crusade. Skeptics questioned timing and motives—Ellison has faced online speculation tied to Epstein circles, though no evidence substantiates involvement—but he dismissed such claims outright: “This is about finishing what she started.”
As partial file drops continue to spark debate and midterms loom, Ellison’s fortune could force open doors long bolted shut. The clock is ticking. What buried truths will surface next may finally deliver the reckoning Giuffre died hoping for—her voice, amplified by $100 million, demands nothing less.
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