A social media post from Virginia Giuffre where she talked about not being suicidal has resurfaced after she took her own life on Friday.

Giuffre, one of Jeffrey Epstein’s most well-known alleged victims, made the post on Twitter, now X, in December 2019. She was responding to another user who said, ‘F.B.I. will kill her to protect the ultra rich and well connected.’

She wrote, ‘I am making it publicy (sic) known that in no way, shape or form am I sucidal (sic). I have made this known to my therapist and GP.

‘If something happens to me- in the sake of my family do not let this go away and help me to protect them. Too many evil people want to see me quiteted (sic),’ she concluded.

Hours after Giuffre, 41, was found dead at her farm in Neergabby, Australia, a number of high profile figures shared the post.

This included conservative influencer Benny Johnson and Republican Congresswoman Nancy Mace of South Carolina, who said, ‘This gave me goosebumps.’

Giuffre claimed she was groomed by Epstein and forced to have sex with Prince Andrew in 2001 when she was 17 years old. The Duke of York denies these claims and in 2022, he settled a lawsuit filed by Giuffre for an undisclosed amount. 

Given her status as one of the most tireless advocates for herself and the many alleged Epstein victims, there is an overwhelming narrative forming among some online that she did not die by suicide and was somehow ‘quieted,’ as Giuffre put it.

The social media posts of Virginia Giuffre (shown holding up a photograph of herself as a teen) have been heavily scrutinized in the hours after death by suicide on Friday

The social media posts of Virginia Giuffre (shown holding up a photograph of herself as a teen) have been heavily scrutinized in the hours after death by suicide on Friday

Giuffre, one of the most well known victims of Jeffrey Epstein, posted this on Twitter, now X, in December 2019. She insisted she was not suicidal

Giuffre, one of the most well known victims of Jeffrey Epstein, posted this on Twitter, now X, in December 2019. She insisted she was not suicidal

Giuffre claimed she was sexually abused by Prince Andrew at the behest of Epstein's associate, jailed British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, when she was just 17. She is seen here alongside the pair

Giuffre claimed she was sexually abused by Prince Andrew at the behest of Epstein’s associate, jailed British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, when she was just 17. She is seen here alongside the pair

It mirrors the conspiracy theories that bubbled up after Epstein himself was found dead in his New York jail cell in August 2019, with many prominent individuals insisting that it was more plausible he was murdered to bury the dirt he had on powerful elites.

Both President Bill Clinton and President Donald Trump have been photographed with Epstein. 

And names such as Mick Jagger, Michael Jackson, actor Alec Baldwin, Ethel Kennedy, Andrew Cuomo, Naomi Campbell and Courtney Love were all present in his address book, as released by the Department of Justice in late February.

Laura Loomer, a MAGA devotee and close ally to President Donald Trump, pointed to the car crash Giuffre was in on March 24 as evidence of a conspiracy against her.

‘I don’t believe Virginia Giuffre committed suicide. Just like I don’t believe Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide. First she gets in a car crash, now they say she killed herself? Sounds like someone wanted her dead,’ Loomer wrote on X.

Marjorie Taylor Greene hit on a similar theme in an Instagram post, saying Giuffre died by ‘suicide,’ intentionally putting the word in quotes to cast doubt.

‘The truth needs to come out more matter who is responsible,’ wrote the Republican congresswoman from Georgia.

Loomer, along with many others, also began slamming Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel for still not releasing all of the Epstein files in the wake of Giuffre’s death.

Concern for Giuffre's wellbeing began on March 30, when she shared a photograph of herself from her hospital bed covered in bruises, with her left eye nearly swollen shut

Concern for Giuffre’s wellbeing began on March 30, when she shared a photograph of herself from her hospital bed covered in bruises, with her left eye nearly swollen shut 

Weeks after the crash, Giuffre then claimed in April that her husband Robert, whom she had three children with, was beating her. They had recently split up after 22 years of marriage

Weeks after the crash, Giuffre then claimed in April that her husband Robert, whom she had three children with, was beating her. They had recently split up after 22 years of marriage 

Concern for Giuffre’s wellbeing began on March 30, when she shared a photograph of herself from her hospital bed covered in bruises, with her left eye nearly swollen shut.

The photograph showed discoloration to her face and chest, which has been described as severe bruising. She claimed she had ‘four days to live’ and that she had kidney failure.

Western Australia Police publicly dismissed the severity of Giuffre’s collision, describing it as a ‘minor’ accident that left no one injured. She was discharged on April 7.

Her family later came out and said she had been on painkillers when she posted to Instagram and believed she was writing on a private social media page. 

Weeks after the crash, Giuffre then claimed in April that her husband, Robert, whom she had three children with, was beating her. They had recently split up after 22 years of marriage.

In a statement to People, she said: ‘I was able to fight back against Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein who abused and trafficked me. But I was unable to escape the domestic violence in my marriage until recently. After my husband’s latest physical assault, I can no longer stay silent.’ 

‘Again, I thank everyone for their support. I have faith that justice will prevail.’

Robert has so far not responded to the allegations.

Giuffre’s family confirmed her death on Friday, first telling NBC News that she was a ‘fierce warrior’ who ultimately could no longer bear the weight of her trauma from being a ‘lifelong victim of sexual abuse and sex trafficking.’

Giuffre was born in California in 1983 and was shattered as a grade-schooler when she was sexually abused by a man her family knew. By the time she was a teenager she was introduced to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell

Giuffre was born in California in 1983 and was shattered as a grade-schooler when she was sexually abused by a man her family knew. By the time she was a teenager she was introduced to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell

She spent much of her life dealing with the trauma of the alleged sexual abuse perpetrated against her, much of it when she was still underage. As an adult she became known as a crusader against sex trafficking (Pictured: Giuffre gives a press conference outside a Manhattan court after Epstein's death in jail)

She spent much of her life dealing with the trauma of the alleged sexual abuse perpetrated against her, much of it when she was still underage. As an adult she became known as a crusader against sex trafficking (Pictured: Giuffre gives a press conference outside a Manhattan court after Epstein’s death in jail)

‘Virginia was a fierce warrior in the fight against sexual abuse and sex trafficking. She was the light that lifted so many survivors. Despite all the adversity she faced in her life, she shone so bright. She will be missed beyond measure. The light of her life were her children Christian, Noah, and Emily, according to the family’s statement. 

‘It was when she held her newborn daughter in her arms that Virginia realized she had to fight back against those who had abused her and so many others,’ the statement read. 

Giuffre was born in California in 1983 and was shattered as a grade-schooler when she was sexually abused by a man her family knew. 

She spent time as a runaway, was shuffled through foster homes and lived on the streets at just 14. She was first forced into sex trafficking by Miami sex trafficker Ron Eppinger. 

Eventually, Giuffre got free of Eppinger and reunited with her father Sky Roberts, according to The Miami Herald. 

At 16 in the year 2000, her father was working in maintenance at Mar-a-Lago resort, the private club owned by Trump, and got her a job as a locker room attendant. 

That’s when she said she met Ghislaine Maxwell, the daughter of Robert Maxwell, a former member of parliament and publisher of several British newspapers.

Giuffre alleged she was trafficked for sex at age 16 after Epstein's associate and ex-lover, Ghislaine Maxwell, recruited her from her job as a locker room attendant at Donald Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida

Giuffre alleged she was trafficked for sex at age 16 after Epstein’s associate and ex-lover, Ghislaine Maxwell, recruited her from her job as a locker room attendant at Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida 

Giuffre claimed Maxwell initially offered her up to Epstein as a massage therapist (Pictured: Maxwell runs laps on the track of FCI Tallahassee on November 6, 2022)

Giuffre claimed Maxwell initially offered her up to Epstein as a massage therapist (Pictured: Maxwell runs laps on the track of FCI Tallahassee on November 6, 2022) 

Giuffre said that Maxwell, who is now serving 20 years in federal prison, offered her the opportunity to work as a massage therapist for Epstein. 

‘They seemed like nice people so I trusted them, and I told them I’d had a really hard time in my life up until then—I’d been a runaway, I’d been sexually abused, physically abused,’ she told the BBC. 

‘That was the worst thing I could have told them because now they knew how vulnerable I was.’

Epstein and Maxwell groomed her to service both of them sexually as well as other clients, she said in an interview and a sworn court affidavit. 

She claimed in 2011 that she was sex trafficked to Prince Andrew on three occasions by Epstein and Maxwell, the first time when she was 17.

She named many of the prominent men she was ‘lent out to’ in the civil suit against Prince Andrew, the records from which were unsealed in 2019.

They included former governor of New Mexico Bill Richardson, hedge fund manager Glenn Dubin, modeling agent Jean-Luc Brunel and attorney Alan Dershowitz. 

Dershowitz, Richardson and Dubin have all publicly and vehemently denied the allegation. Brunel, who faced decades of allegations of sexual abuse, died from an apparent suicide in 2022.



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