Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 19
Giuffre Family Pushes Virginia's Law and Full Epstein File Release After Her Death at 41
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · Jul 19

Giuffre Family Pushes Virginia's Law and Full Epstein File Release After Her Death at 41

3 articles · Updated · The Guardian · Jul 19

Summary

  • Sky and Amanda Roberts say they are relaunching Virginia Giuffre’s nonprofit Soar and pressing for “Virginia’s Law,” which would end the federal statute of limitations for sexual-abuse cases.
  • That campaign is tied to a second demand: release the remaining Epstein documents unredacted for alleged perpetrators while protecting victims’ identities, after the US published only partial, heavily redacted files.
  • The family says Giuffre’s memoir and the fallout since her April death have intensified pressure on powerful figures, including Prince Andrew, who settled her civil suit for a reported £12 million without admitting liability and was later arrested on separate misconduct allegations.
  • They argue the Justice Department is still blocking fuller disclosure despite the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and want UK authorities to keep investigating and consider a public inquiry if the US stalls.
  • For the family, the push is also about Giuffre’s legacy: turning the story of a survivor who died by suicide at 41 into lasting legal change for other abuse victims.

Insights

With millions of files still hidden, what are US officials truly protecting in the Epstein case?
Could the very files meant to expose Epstein's network ironically be used to free Ghislaine Maxwell?
After losing his titles and facing arrest, will Prince Andrew finally face criminal charges for his Epstein ties?