Virginia Giuffre's memoir co-author says Epstein client list exists, despite claims to contrary
The saga of the late billionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has been part of the public consciousness for years, but the details and scope of the scandal have garnered an even greater degree of attention in recent months.
This week’s release of a posthumous memoir from Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre has promised a host of new revelations, with its co-author asserting that she knows all of the names contained in the much-discussed and still largely secret files, as the Daily Mail reports.
Ghostwriter speaks out
Amy Wallace, who co-wrote Nobody’s Girl, a memoir in which Giuffre recounted harrowing details of her life under Epstein’s thumb, has stepped forward this week to provide insight into the information she says that she -- and the FBI -- holds about the sex trafficking and abuse that occurred.
In recent months, top Trump administration officials such as Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel have declared that no discrete or specific “client list” exists within government files on Jeffrey Epstein, despite growing calls for the public release of such information.
Wallace, however, has come forth to contradict that claim, stating that such a collection of names does exist and that she knows the identities of all those implicated in it.
What’s more, she contends that the FBI and the DOJ possess the same information she does and have done so for roughly ten years.
“Yes, I know who the names are. Virginia knows who the names are, but so does the FBI and so does the Department of Justice,” adding that the long-rumored list “exists in the FBI files” but that it is the government’s responsibility -- not hers or Giuffre’s -- to end the secrecy on the matter.
High-profile figures implicated
Though many are familiar with Giuffre’s prior claims of having been sex trafficked by Epstein to Britain’s Prince Andrew, he is far from the only high-profile participant mentioned in the memoir, published months after her April death, said to have been a suicide.
Giuffre’s tell-all claims that she was also subjected to sexual abuse at the hands of a former U.S. senator, a professor of psychology, and the governor of an American state, among others.
An excerpt from the book says, “I came to be trafficked to a multitude of powerful men. Among them were a gubernatorial candidate who was soon to win an election in a Western state and a former U.S. senator.”
Giuffre added, “The second person I was lent out to was a psychology professor whose research Epstein was helping to fund” and she went on to claim brutal abuse by a “well-known prime minister,” someone she said “raped me more savagely than anyone had before,” going so far as to choke her to the point of unconsciousness.
The book also included hints and identifying details about other individuals Giuffre accused of wrongdoing, referencing an aging “heralded statesman” as well as a billionaire in his fifties with “thinning brown hair.”
Royal fallout builds
Despite suggestions from Wallace and Giuffre that there are some very well known names at the heart of this ongoing scandal, the worst public fallout to date has been heaped upon Prince Andrew, who last week announced that he would no longer use his royal titles and honors, as Reuters noted, a move said to have been strongly urged by his brother, King Charles, as well as by Prince William.
Though he has denied all allegations related to Giuffre, Andrew is under new scrutiny amid reports that he asked a member of his police protection detail to dig up details on his accuser, and with some U.K. lawmakers now asking that his titles be formally stripped, it seems the royal is the first -- but perhaps not the last -- public figure whose ultimate downfall will flow from ties to Epstein.






