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Prince Andrew sex accuser Virginia Giuffre’s memoir omitted name of ‘well known’ former Prime Minister who raped her because ‘she feared he’d kill her’

In the ongoing debate about the memoir written after the death of Virginia Giuffre, Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse victim, the question of who the “sadistic” former Prime Minister is, who she says raped and beat her, still remains.

Since Ms Giuffre’s harrowing tell-all book Nobody’s Child was published ten days ago, Prince Andrew has been in the spotlight for his friendship with billionaire pedophile Epstein, with Ms Giuffre claiming Andrew had sex with her three times while she was a victim of sex trafficking, which he denies.

However, Piers Morgan brought up the scandal of the alleged mistreatment of the young Miss Giuffre by the ‘prominent Prime Minister’ mentioned in the book, which goes far beyond the other men he wrote about.

And Virginia’s ghostwriter, Amy Wallace, told Morgan that Virginia left the man’s name out of the book because she truly believed the man would kill her if she gave his name.

When interviewing Ms Wallace on the YouTube show Piers Morgan Uncensored, the broadcaster asked her: ‘She says in the book that one of the men who raped her was a high-profile former prime minister of a country, an astonishing claim. Are you in a position to say more?’

“People who read the book will see that the man was not just a rapist, he was a sadist,” Ms Wallace said. ‘If you’re asking me if I can give that person’s name, my answer is no and I’ll tell you why.

‘As I said before, every sexual assault victim makes a benefit/cost calculation, I want to hold them accountable. What will it cost me? My privacy?

‘Obviously in Virginia’s case it’s about physical safety and threats. And he took these; so that gentleman was afraid that you would kill him.’

Since Virginia Giuffre’s (pictured, right) harrowing tell-all book Nobody’s Child was published ten days ago, the biggest buzz has been about Prince Andrew’s (pictured, left) friendship with billionaire pedophile Epstein.

A striking passage in the book is in which Virginia, who committed suicide in April, describes the politician’s attack more than 20 years ago.

She recalled: ‘Just when I thought things couldn’t get any worse for me, they did: Epstein sold me out to a man who raped me more brutally than anyone had ever done before.

‘We were on Epstein’s island when I was ordered to take this man to a cabin. It quickly became clear that this man, whom I only took care to describe in the legal records as a former prime minister, was not interested in caresses.

‘He wanted violence. He strangled me repeatedly until I lost consciousness and enjoyed seeing me in fear for my life.

‘Horrifyingly, this man laughed when he hurt me and became even more aroused when I begged him to stop.

‘I later tearfully begged Epstein not to send me back to him.

‘I got down on my knees and begged him. I don’t know if Epstein was afraid of the man or owed him a favor, but he didn’t make any promises, coldly dismissing the politician’s brutality as “You’ll understand that sometimes.”

About two months later, Epstein sent her to the same man again, this time to have sexual intercourse with her on the billionaire’s private jet.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre speaks at a press conference outside the Manhattan courthouse in New York, August 27, 2019

Virginia Roberts Giuffre speaks at a press conference outside the Manhattan courthouse in New York, August 27, 2019

Although he had not used violence in that incident, he recalled being terrified.

‘The blood rushed to my head and I could barely breathe. ‘Will he kill me this time?’ I wondered and for a moment I felt dizzy and thought I was going to faint.

‘The pilot secretly closed the cockpit door and we took off. For the next hour I was on high alert, bracing for a fatal blow.

The ghostwriter, Mrs. Wallace, tells Morgan that the former minister’s threat is as real as it was before Virginia’s death.

‘Since the week the book came out, I’ve had people contact me and say, ‘We know who that man is, he could kill her.’ ‘He’s got the talent to do it.’

Miss Wallace said the other men made threats against Virginia, telling her to ‘Take our names out of your mouth, or else they will’, or they promised to hold her in court for the ‘rest of her life’.

Ms Wallace added: ‘She is a mother after all. He needs to protect his family. They were threatened and obviously those children are still alive.

‘Unfortunately, Virginia is not like that. He should be sitting where I’m sitting, talking to you, but his family is still alive and some of these people are scary.

‘So Virginia made the decisions, and my stance as her ghostwriter, her collaborator, was to give her something that I wish she had gotten more of in her lifetime, while she was with us; So respect, he made decisions that I respect and I will not violate them.’

A shopper buys Virginia Giuffre's memoir 'Nobody's Daughter' at a bookstore in London, Tuesday, October 21, 2025, six months after Giuffre died by suicide.

A shopper buys Virginia Giuffre’s memoir ‘Nobody’s Daughter’ at a bookstore in London, Tuesday, October 21, 2025, six months after Giuffre died by suicide.

Calling on the FBI to take action against the former prime minister and other abusers, he said: ‘Frankly law enforcement needs to do their job.

‘She and other brave survivors of this sex trafficking ring went to the FBI over and over again, they met with Department of Justice officials over and over again. Their names are in the Epstein files and nothing has been done about it.’

The call was echoed by Virginia attorney Sigrid McCawley, who appeared on CNN’s Jake Tapper’s The Lead last week and was asked whether the politician’s name had been given to police.

Mrs McCawley replied: ‘Absolutely. Like most survivors, Virginia cooperated with law enforcement from the beginning. So he really wanted those who harmed him to be held accountable.

‘And you heard about the horrific abuse described in her book, and it’s just, you know, the book doesn’t summarize everything she went through, so there were certainly many more of those examples, and she shared that information with law enforcement.

‘I attended interviews with him, he explained clearly everything that had happened to him and we were always hopeful that law enforcement would continue to move forward after securing a conviction. [Epstein’s recruiter and girlfriend] We were hopeful that others who participated in these crimes would also be held accountable,’ Ghislaine Maxwell said.

Tapper asked: ‘A prime minister might think that, by definition, if someone from another country comes to the United States and rapes an American girl or an American woman, it would be in the interest of law enforcement, it would be in the interest of justice, it would be in the interest of law enforcement, it would be in the interest of justice to investigate, to interview that person, perhaps even to prosecute that person.

‘Has there been any action taken by Justice Department investigators during any presidency to speak to this prime minister?’

Ms. McCawley said it wasn’t.

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