Epstein Whistleblower Found Dead — Her Final Words, Revealed

By Jessie Stone • May 16, 2025
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At a quiet farmhouse in Western Australia, a handwritten note lay hidden among Virginia Giuffre's possessions. In just a few lines, it carried the weight of a lifelong fight — and an unflinching call to keep going. Days later, the note was shared with the world by her family, following Giuffre's tragic death by suicide at age 41.

Her story has long been public — a survivor of sexual abuse, a voice against Jeffrey Epstein and others she accused, including Britain's Prince Andrew (who has denied the allegations). But this final message offers something deeply personal — a last act of advocacy in ink.

A Final Message Meant for Survivors

The note wasn't formally addressed, and it may never have been meant for the public. But Giuffre's family said they found it among her things after her death on April 25. According to her sister-in-law, Amanda Roberts, the letter was likely written in support of a protest in Washington, D.C., set for Denim Day — an event spotlighting sexual violence awareness, as reported by the New York Post.

According to Newsweek, Giuffre wrote, "Mothers, fathers, sisters and brothers need to show the battlelines are drawn and we stand together to fight for the future of victims. Is protesting the answer? I don't know, but we've got to start somewhere."

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Those words were later shared on social media by her brother, Sky Roberts, who urged survivors and protesters to carry her spirit forward. "I think it's important that the survivors know that she's with you and her voice will not be silenced. I know that it's so important, and her wish is that we continue to fight," he wrote, according to Newsweek.

A Legacy Rooted in Resistance

Virginia Giuffre's life was shaped by survival — and by her decision to speak out when others would not. She publicly accused Epstein and his network of trafficking her as a teenager, and later reached a legal settlement with Prince Andrew in 2022, according PEOPLE.

Despite public recognition, Giuffre's private life was unraveling in recent months. Her family said she had been battling to regain custody of her three children after separating from her husband of 22 years. A restraining order had barred her from seeing them, and she expressed her anguish online. "I'm ready to go, just not until I see my babies one last time, but you know what they say about wishes," she wrote in March, according to the New York Post.

Her family shared that she was in emotional and physical pain. Though her lawyer initially questioned the circumstances of her death, she later clarified she did not believe anything suspicious had occurred. Authorities are currently investigating, with a coroner's report expected.

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'We've Got to Start Somewhere'

The note, though short, hits hard — not only because of who wrote it, but because of what it asks. It doesn't lay out a polished strategy. It doesn't offer easy answers. It simply calls for unity.

Her use of "we" — not "I" — is striking. It's a reminder that her fight was never just her own. She saw herself as part of a larger movement, one where strength comes from standing shoulder-to-shoulder.

In sharing the note, her family made one thing clear — Virginia wanted her voice to carry on, even if she couldn't anymore. They've asked the world not to let it fade.

References: Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre's family reveals her defiant words in handwritten note found after her suicide | Virginia Giuffre's Final Handwritten Note Before Death Released | Virginia Giuffre's Lawyer Addresses Speculation About Her Death | Virginia Giuffre's Family Shares Old Note Found After Her Death

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