A former U.S. senator, a gubernatorial front-runner and a “well-known” prime minister were a mere sampling of the powerful politicians Virginia Giuffre was forced to pleasure while in thrall to sex-abuse peddler Jeffrey Epstein, according to her memoir released Tuesday.
The posthumously published “Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice” drops tantalizing clues about these men but rarely names them.
Giuffre, who died by suicide in April, was more focused on mapping the infrastructure Epstein created and the systemic enabling that made it all possible.
“I do not make this decision to hold back lightly,” she wrote in the book, saying she was afraid that some could hurt her, while others threatened litigation.
The prime minister was by far Giuffre’s worst experience out of a wide field of possibilities, according to her account.
He “raped me more savagely than anyone had before” when she was 18, Giuffre wrote. “He repeatedly choked me until I lost consciousness and took pleasure in seeing me fear for my life. Horrifically, the Prime Minister laughed when he hurt me and got more aroused when I begged him to stop.”
Her plea for Epstein to keep the politician away from her merely generated the cold response, “‘You’ll get that sometimes,’” she claimed.
The prime minister — whom Giuffre referred to as a “former minister” in the U.K. version, according to CNN — was just one of the “scores of wealthy, powerful people” she was passed around to while imprisoned in Epstein’s curated circles of hell.
“I was habitually used and humiliated — and in some instances choked, beaten, and bloodied. I believed that I might die a sex slave,” she wrote.
Epstein rarely introduced the “multitude of powerful men” Giuffre was trafficked to, so she was often in the dark about their identities.
“I would only learn who some of them were years later, when I studied photographs of Epstein’s associates and recognized the faces of those I was forced to have sex with,” she claimed.
In 2016, Giuffre testified in a deposition that former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson and former Maine Sen. George Mitchell were two of those men, and they match the unnamed descriptions in the book. Both have denied this took place, and neither has ever been charged.
She has also named Epstein attorney Alan Dershowitz, whose denials have been equally vehement.
The one name that does jump out, of course, is Britain’s Prince Andrew, the now virtually banished younger brother to King Charles III. He’s mentioned in the book no fewer than 88 times, including the three instances Giuffre claims they had sex, the first time being when she was just 17.
With News Wire Services