Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir has reignited global attention on Jeffrey Epstein’s network of power, sex, and silence. In Nobody’s Girl, the woman who for years stood as the most visible face of Epstein’s victims details not just her own abuse, but new, shocking allegations — including one about a former British prime minister and another about Ghislaine Maxwell’s boast involving George Clooney. According to a report in the New York Post, Maxwell bragged about performing a sex act on George Clooney during a party. Giuffre describes how Maxwell would return from social events “giddy as a schoolgirl,” eager to share gossip about her supposed conquests.
“Whether that was true or not, we’ll never know,” Giuffre wrote, acknowledging that Maxwell often exaggerated her stories.
According to the account, Maxwell told others she had “given George Clooney a blow job in the bathroom at some random event” — a story she reportedly repeated with great pride. Clooney, however, has never been publicly linked to Epstein or Maxwell, and his representatives did not respond to New York Post or put out a statement.
The former British Prime Minister allegation
In one of the memoir’s most disturbing chapters, Giuffre alleges that she was raped and violently assaulted by a “well-known prime minister” while under Epstein’s control. She recounts being choked until she lost consciousness, describing the experience as one of terror and disbelief.
“He laughed when he hurt me and seemed to enjoy it more when I begged him to stop,” she wrote.
Giuffre says she pleaded with Epstein not to send her back to the politician but was ignored. The memoir does not identify the leader by name, though the language suggests he held office at the time.
Prince Andrew and the enduring scandal
Giuffre also revisits her earlier accusations against Prince Andrew, claiming she was trafficked to him by Epstein and Maxwell when she was a teenager. The now-infamous photograph of Andrew with his arm around a young Giuffre at Maxwell’s London home remains a central image of the scandal.
Andrew has consistently denied wrongdoing and settled a civil lawsuit with Giuffre in 2022 without admitting guilt.
Why it matters
The memoir’s publication comes at a time when public interest in the Epstein files has once again surged. Its release not only revives long-standing questions about who else may have been involved but also exposes the layers of coercion, complicity, and fear that defined Epstein’s network.
Giuffre’s account is not just a personal reckoning; it is a brutal indictment of how power shields predators. From royalty to political leaders, her story portrays a system in which wealth and status operated as armour — one that allowed abuse to flourish behind locked doors and legal settlements.
The big picture
“Whether that was true or not, we’ll never know,” Giuffre wrote, acknowledging that Maxwell often exaggerated her stories.
According to the account, Maxwell told others she had “given George Clooney a blow job in the bathroom at some random event” — a story she reportedly repeated with great pride. Clooney, however, has never been publicly linked to Epstein or Maxwell, and his representatives did not respond to New York Post or put out a statement.
The former British Prime Minister allegation
In one of the memoir’s most disturbing chapters, Giuffre alleges that she was raped and violently assaulted by a “well-known prime minister” while under Epstein’s control. She recounts being choked until she lost consciousness, describing the experience as one of terror and disbelief.
“He laughed when he hurt me and seemed to enjoy it more when I begged him to stop,” she wrote.
Giuffre says she pleaded with Epstein not to send her back to the politician but was ignored. The memoir does not identify the leader by name, though the language suggests he held office at the time.
Prince Andrew and the enduring scandal
Giuffre also revisits her earlier accusations against Prince Andrew, claiming she was trafficked to him by Epstein and Maxwell when she was a teenager. The now-infamous photograph of Andrew with his arm around a young Giuffre at Maxwell’s London home remains a central image of the scandal.
Andrew has consistently denied wrongdoing and settled a civil lawsuit with Giuffre in 2022 without admitting guilt.
Why it matters
The memoir’s publication comes at a time when public interest in the Epstein files has once again surged. Its release not only revives long-standing questions about who else may have been involved but also exposes the layers of coercion, complicity, and fear that defined Epstein’s network.
Giuffre’s account is not just a personal reckoning; it is a brutal indictment of how power shields predators. From royalty to political leaders, her story portrays a system in which wealth and status operated as armour — one that allowed abuse to flourish behind locked doors and legal settlements.
The big picture
- Maxwell, now 63, is serving a 20-year prison sentence in the US for sex trafficking minors.
- Epstein died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on federal trafficking charges.
- Nobody’s Girl adds new layers of testimony to a saga that continues to expose the dark intersections of politics, celebrity, and exploitation.
- The identities of some alleged abusers remain concealed, suggesting that the full extent of Epstein’s network may never be known.
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