In a moment that caught the world off guard, Virginia Giuffre’s family suddenly released her explosive handwritten final note—discovered after her heartbreaking suicide in April 2025—transforming private mourning into a powerful, thunderous demand for justice. The raw words, penned as a rallying cry for survivors, urge “mothers, fathers, sisters, and brothers” to draw battle lines and unite, declaring with fierce determination: “We are not going to go away.” This isn’t just a personal farewell; it’s Virginia’s unyielding continuation of her battle against Epstein’s network of enablers, proving her courage outlives the trauma that silenced her. As her loved ones share it to keep her fight alive, outrage surges anew across the globe. Will this defiant message finally push the powerful to face the accountability she demanded?
In a moment that caught the world off guard, Virginia Giuffre’s family suddenly released a handwritten note discovered after her heartbreaking suicide on April 25, 2025. What began as private mourning quickly transformed into a powerful, thunderous demand for justice that reverberates across the globe.
The raw words, penned shortly before her death, are not a personal farewell but a rallying cry for survivors everywhere. Giuffre wrote: “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.” With fierce determination, she declared: “To all survivors and those protesting. We stand with you… We are not going to go away.”
Her sister-in-law Amanda Roberts and brother Sky Roberts shared the note publicly after learning of a survivor-led protest scheduled for April 30, 2025—Denim Day, an international day of awareness for sexual violence—in Washington, D.C. The family emphasized that these words reflect Virginia’s unyielding spirit: “Her voice will not be silenced.” By releasing the note, they honor her wish to keep the fight alive through her organization SOAR (Speak Out, Act, Reclaim) and beyond.
Virginia Giuffre dedicated her adult life to exposing the dark network built by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell. At just 16, while working as a spa attendant at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort, she was recruited by Maxwell and drawn into years of sexual abuse and trafficking. She escaped in 2002, later becoming one of the most courageous voices for accountability. Giuffre sued Epstein and Maxwell, settled a civil lawsuit against Prince Andrew in 2022 (allegations he has always denied), and played a crucial role in Maxwell’s 2022 conviction and 20-year sentence. Her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl, published in October 2025, offered a searing account of her trauma and resilience.
The profound psychological scars from that abuse—compounded by later personal struggles, including a serious car accident and custody battles—contributed to her decision to end her life at age 41, leaving behind three children and a devastated family. Yet even in her final message, there is no surrender, only forward momentum and solidarity.
The release of this note has ignited fresh outrage worldwide. It has spread rapidly across social media, inspiring new protests, vigils, and campaigns as survivors and advocates echo her defiant words: “We are not going to go away.” For decades, Epstein’s network operated under a veil of elite protection—powerful figures attended his parties, flew on his private jet, and visited his properties while allegations were dismissed or buried. Giuffre spent her life tearing at that veil, and now her final message proves her courage outlives the trauma that ultimately silenced her.
Her family is committed to ensuring her fight continues. Through SOAR and public advocacy, they carry her torch, supporting victims and demanding systemic change. The note serves as a stark reminder that silence—whether enforced by power, shame, or despair—can never fully extinguish truth.
Virginia Giuffre’s thunderous final demand is not just a call to survivors; it is a challenge to society. It asks whether the world is finally ready to confront the enablers who allowed predators like Epstein to thrive for so long. Her words, born from unimaginable pain, have become a beacon of unbreakable resolve, ensuring that her battle—and the battles of countless others—will endure until justice prevails.

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