Virginia Giuffre’s stomach knotted as Epstein’s voice hissed the order: go to Glenn Dubin, now, still a minor. Years later, Eva Dubin’s sworn letter glowed with warmth—“Virginia was like family”—while flight logs show Epstein jetting to their Palm Beach estate post-conviction, welcomed for holidays. The couple’s affidavits paint her as trusted babysitter; Giuffre remembers coercion. One household, two realities: daughter or disposable? The open door for a sex offender slams shut on every excuse.

Virginia Giuffre remembers the order with a sickness that never fades.
Jeffrey Epstein’s voice, sharp and commanding, slicing through the air: “Go to Glenn Dubin. Now.”
She was still a minor, barely seventeen, and the words were not a request—they were an instruction from a man who owned her time, her body, her fear. Years later, that command would echo through court filings and sworn statements, clashing violently with the polished denials of Manhattan’s elite.
In “Nobody’s Girl,” Giuffre writes about the years when billionaires and professors blurred together in Epstein’s orbit—men with immaculate reputations and monstrous secrets. One name, Glenn Dubin, still stings with particular betrayal. Not only because of the alleged abuse, but because of the family that surrounded him: Dr. Eva Andersson-Dubin, his wife, a former Miss Sweden turned respected oncologist, founder of a cancer center at Mount Sinai, and once, Epstein’s girlfriend.
After Eva’s relationship with Epstein ended, the Dubins stayed close to him—too close. Court records and emails reveal that Epstein continued to visit their homes in New York and Palm Beach, even after his 2008 conviction for soliciting a minor. In one 2009 letter to Epstein’s probation officer, Eva wrote that her family was “100% comfortable” having him around their children. To the public, it read as loyalty; to Giuffre, it felt like erasure.
The Dubins’ affidavits filed in response to Giuffre’s claims paint a serene picture: Virginia as a trusted babysitter, a young woman “like a daughter” who cared for their kids, part of the family circle. Glenn Dubin called her allegations “demonstrably false,” dismissing her testimony as fiction. Yet for Giuffre, those same years were a nightmare lived behind expensive doors—a world where affection was transactional and safety was a myth.
Two realities coexist, separated by wealth and power.
In one, the Dubins are philanthropists, dinner hosts, and hospital benefactors. In the other, they are the polished faces of a system that smiled while predators mingled at their table.
Flight logs place Epstein visiting the Dubins’ Palm Beach home after his release, during holidays meant for family. To welcome a convicted sex offender into one’s home isn’t mere forgiveness—it’s complicity wrapped in civility. Thanksgiving dinners and holiday gatherings became stages where morality was replaced by manners, where silence served as the finest cutlery.
Giuffre’s account and the Dubins’ defenses are not just opposing statements; they are symbols of how power fractures truth. Her words—raw, trembling, unfiltered—stand against a wall of legal polish and social respectability. The question is no longer who is telling the truth, but how much truth can survive when money decides what the world believes.
To call Virginia “like family” while inviting her trafficker to dinner is not a contradiction—it is the anatomy of denial. In Epstein’s universe, friendship and exploitation shared the same address, the same guest list, the same polite smiles.
One household, two realities: a daughter in one version, a disposable object in the other.
And as the door closes on every excuse, the silence that follows is louder than any denial—because no amount of philanthropy can redeem a home that welcomed a monster and shut out justice.
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