Virginia Roberts Giuffre alleges that a “Prime Minister” raped her “more savagely than anyone had before,” writing in her memoir that “Epstein cared only about Epstein.”
Giuffre refers to the man only as “the Prime Minister,” saying she fears he might “seek to hurt” her if she were to reveal his name.
In earlier court filings, however, she identified Israel’s former Prime Minister Ehud Barak among the powerful men she accused of assault — an allegation Barak has repeatedly denied.
In Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, Giuffre recounts meeting the “Prime Minister” on Jeffrey Epstein’s private island in the U.S. Virgin Islands around 2002, when she was just 18. She says she was instructed to accompany him to a cabana, where he quickly made clear that “he wanted violence.”
According to Giuffre, the man choked her repeatedly until she lost consciousness, appearing to take pleasure in her fear. “He laughed when he hurt me,” she wrote, “and became more aroused when I begged him to stop.” Giuffre says she left the cabana bleeding and in severe pain, injuries that made it difficult for her to breathe or swallow for days afterward.
The abuse is described in Giuffre’s memoir, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice.
According to her account, the politician “raped me more savagely than anyone had before.”
Shaken and terrified, Giuffre says she immediately went to Jeffrey Epstein and begged him not to send her back to the Prime Minister.
“I got down on my knees and pleaded with him,” she wrote. “I don’t know if Epstein feared the man or owed him a favor, but he wouldn’t make any promises. He said coldly of the politician’s brutality, ‘You’ll get that sometimes.’”
Giuffre had previously accused former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak of assault.
She wrote that sometime afterward, Epstein sent her back to the same politician for a second encounter, this time taking place entirely inside a cabin aboard the Lolita Express.
While Giuffre said the second meeting was “far less violent,” she described spending the entire hour in constant fear that he might suddenly strike or strangle her again.
Giuffre also admitted that before the violent assault, she had given Epstein the benefit of the doubt, believing that he “cared for the girls he trafficked.”
Giuffre spent about two years under the control of Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
She wrote that she was not entirely naive, acknowledging that Epstein’s “predilection for childlike girls was a sickness, but in his twisted way, he meant well.”
However, his indifference to her fear and the injuries inflicted by the Prime Minister forced the 18-year-old to confront a painful truth.
In a chilling reflection, Giuffre predicted her own death, writing that she would not survive a life under Epstein’s control and feared she might either take her own life or be killed by one of his associates.
“I didn’t know it then, but my second interaction with the Prime Minister was the beginning of the end for me,” Giuffre said, noting that she stopped recruiting other young girls for Epstein, as she had been forced to do previously.
The final breaking point came that summer when Epstein and Maxwell pressured Giuffre to carry their child — a proposal that promised mansions, wealth, and round-the-clock nannies, but required her to sign away any legal rights.
The teenager immediately feared that they intended to use the baby as a future victim and began planning her escape.
She eventually freed herself from the couple’s control, but the experiences haunted her for the rest of her life, particularly the “greedy, cruel look on the Prime Minister’s face as he watched me beg for my life.”
Ehud Barak has repeatedly denied Giuffre’s claims of abuse or any knowledge of Epstein’s criminal activities.
Barak, a personal friend of Epstein, reportedly used several million dollars of Epstein’s funds to finance a security company.
Records indicate that Barak visited Epstein’s private island and boarded his private plane.
The disturbing account appears in Giuffre’s memoir, set to be released next week, which she wrote in the years before her tragic suicide in April at the age of 41.