Virginia Giuffre’s ghostwriter has revealed that she knows the names of everyone listed in the Epstein files.
Amy Wallace, the co-author of Giuffre’s posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl, claimed the list definitely exists and that she knows the identities of everyone named and that the FBI has been holding it for more than ten years. She said the Department of Justice (DOJ) also know who the names are.
Talking with NewsNation on Tuesday, Wallace described Giuffre’s novel as a ‘predator’s playbook,’ which laid out in vile detail just how powerful men can groom, trap and shatter the lives of young girls.
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The Mail Online reports: She went on to admit for the first time publicly that she holds her own explosive archive from years of recorded conversations with Giuffre naming her alleged abusers.
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‘I know all the names that are there,’ Wallace told NewsNation on Tuesday. ‘But every different scene, she had to make a decision about whether she was going to rename or name these people.’
Despite harboring the very information the public has demanded, Wallace said the DOJ – not she or Giuffre – should bear responsibility for the ongoing secrecy over the names.
‘It exists in the FBI files. She had many names and depositions already that have been made public,’ Wallace said during the interview.
‘There are four different document dumps, and there are many, many names in those,’ she added.
‘They have the names, and they’ve had them for more than a decade.’
Among one of the memoir’s most shocking claims, Giuffre alleged that she was forced to have sex with Prince Andrew three times following their first meeting in March 2001. He has denied the allegations against him.
She claimed that after their first sexual encounter, he made a chilling remark comparing her to his daughters who were slightly younger than her at just 17.
The third alleged sexual encounter involved not only the prince, but Epstein and nine other women who all ‘appeared under 18 and didn’t speak English’, Giuffre claimed.
Giuffre wrote that days later she woke up in a pool of blood and was rushed to the hospital by Epstein.
She came around to him murmuring instructions to a medic about her care and a doctor warning she might never bear children, though that grim prediction ultimately proved false.
Giuffre also detailed that she was abused by a former US senator, a governor and a psychology professor without releasing their full identities.
‘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 US Senator,’ one line read.
Another said: ‘The second person I was lent out to was a psychology professor whose research Epstein was helping to fund.’
Giuffre described another account involving a man who she referred to as a ‘well-known prime minister,’ who she accused of brutally assaulting her.
‘Epstein trafficked me to a man who raped me more savagely than anyone had before,’ the memoir read. ‘He repeatedly choked me until I lost consciousness.’
She revealed identifying details – from nicknames to distinctive features – of other additional alleged abusers, including the ‘heralded statesman,’ the oldest man she claimed she was trafficked to.
In one chapter, she referred to another man as ‘Billionaire No. 1’ and his pregnant wife, as well as ‘Billionaire No. 2,’ a 52-year-old she described as having thinning brown hair.
President Donald Trump has long been linked to Epstein, and Wallace said his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida served as the gateway to Giuffre’s nightmare.
But Wallace said that while many expected Giuffre to accuse Trump, she instead cleared him of any wrongdoing, though she confirmed he had been on the island.
‘Virginia was in the Epstein-Maxwell orbit for about 24 months, a little longer, and so she only knows about that period,’ Wallace told NewsNation.
‘But in that period, she didn’t see Trump in any sort of compromising position,’ she added. She knew Donald Trump because she worked there.’
Meanwhile American radio hostess and journalist Kim Iversen has put names to some of those people. She said Virgina Guiffre may not have been able to name the names in her book, but she could
And she does in the following tweet!

