
Virginia Roberts Giuffre, an outspoken accuser of Jeffrey Epstein, alleged that her own father had abused her and suggested that he took hush money from Epstein in a posthumous memoir releasing Tuesday. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. Giuffre, 41, had been working on the book with a co-author before she died by suicide in April. In the memoir, she alleges that other men had abused her before she was groomed by Epstein at age 16.
Main Idea: Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir says she was abused by her father as a child and suggests he may have taken hush money from Jeffrey Epstein.
Key Points:
The memoir may deepen public anger over abuse and fraud tied to Epstein, adding distress for survivors and families while keeping attention on failures that let abuse continue.
The account may help some victims speak up and support stronger abuse reporting and accountability.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Core figure in the abuse and trafficking allegations and central to the memoir’s claims.
Primary subject of the memoir and central figure making the abuse allegations discussed in the article.
Major associated figure in Giuffre’s account and in the broader Epstein case discussed in the article.
Central accused figure in the memoir’s abuse allegations and in the claim that he may have taken money.
Giuffre’s brother who is quoted reacting to the allegations and discussing the family abuse claims.
NBC News reporter mentioned because Sky Roberts Jr. spoke to her; not a focus of the story.
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