Virginia Giuffre’s voice broke in court papers: Epstein commanded her, barely 17, to Glenn Dubin’s bed—yet the billionaire couple filed affidavits claiming she was “like a daughter,” babysitting their kids while inviting the registered sex offender to Thanksgiving. The same table that held turkey platters welcomed a predator who’d just pleaded guilty. Eva Dubin wrote in 2009 she felt “100% comfortable” with Epstein around her children. Friendship or facade? The sworn denials only tighten the knot: if family means open doors to a monster, what horrors hid behind closed ones?

Virginia Giuffre’s voice trembles through the pages of legal filings like a ghost that refuses to be buried. In her testimony, she recalls being seventeen when Jeffrey Epstein ordered her to the bed of billionaire hedge fund magnate Glenn Dubin—a command spoken in the same tone Epstein used when assigning chores, as if trafficking a child were part of an ordinary schedule. For years, her story sat in sealed files, whispered about but never confronted. Now, it stands as one of the most disturbing chapters in the legacy of wealth, denial, and moral rot.
The Dubins, Glenn and his wife Dr. Eva Andersson-Dubin, built lives that gleamed with respectability. He was a Wall Street titan, co-founder of Highbridge Capital Management, later bought by JPMorgan for $1.3 billion. She was Miss Sweden turned oncologist, founder of the Dubin Breast Cancer Center at Mount Sinai, and a philanthropist beloved by the New York elite. Together, they were the embodiment of success — until Epstein’s shadow crept into the picture.
Eva was once Epstein’s girlfriend, and though the romance ended, the friendship persisted. Even after Epstein became a registered sex offender, the Dubins kept him close. Court documents and emails show that Epstein dined in their Manhattan townhouse, vacationed near them, and stayed a “beloved family friend.” In a 2009 letter to Epstein’s probation officer, Eva wrote that her family was “100% comfortable having Jeffrey around our children.”
That single sentence lands like a thunderclap.
By that time, Epstein had already pleaded guilty to soliciting sex from a minor. He was a convicted predator. Yet at the Dubins’ table, where fine china and crystal glasses glittered under chandelier light, he was still a welcome guest. Giuffre’s lawyers later noted the irony: while Virginia was being cross-examined about her trauma, the man who trafficked her was being passed the gravy.
When the allegations surfaced, Glenn Dubin denied everything, calling Giuffre’s claims “demonstrably false.” Eva filed her own affidavit, declaring Virginia “like a daughter” to the family, a trusted babysitter who watched over their children. The implication was clear: no predator would let his victim care for his kids. But to many, the defense only deepened the unease. In Epstein’s orbit, friendship and exploitation were never opposites—they were layers of the same deception.
To invite a convicted sex offender into your home isn’t an act of compassion. It’s complicity polished to a social shine. The Thanksgiving table, once a symbol of warmth and family, became an altar to denial — where kindness masqueraded as loyalty, and silence was served beside the stuffing.
Behind closed doors, the line between affection and abuse blurred until it vanished. Whether Virginia’s account is accepted in every detail or not, one truth remains unshakable: Epstein’s power thrived not just on his own cruelty, but on the willingness of others to look away.
For all their wealth and prestige, the Dubins’ greatest investment may have been in appearances — the illusion that goodness could be measured in donations and dinner parties. But every illusion has a price. And somewhere between the fine silverware and the sealed court records lies the uncomfortable legacy of a family who opened their doors to a monster — and closed them to the truth.
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