Virginia Giuffre: Epstein’s most prominent Aussie accuser left her children four houses and a small fortune

Sex-trafficking survivor Virginia Giuffre died without a valid will, despite having amassed a small fortune which included civil lawsuit settlements and a multi-million dollar property portfolio in Australia.
The Nightly can reveal that an application has been made to the Supreme Court of WA for Letters of Administration because the high-profile sexual abuse campaigner had not left a valid will or appointed an executor of her estate.
The probate application is currently in the “requisition” stage, which is where the court Registrar writes to the applicant to advise them of any problems with the application and tell them what they must do to remedy the issues.
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By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.The West Australian has previously revealed that in early June, Giuffre’s sons – Christian and Noah – had published a public notice in the WA Government Gazette calling for creditors.
Giuffre, 41, is believed to have died from suicide at a rural property in Western Australia on April 25.

Giuffre’s step-brother Sky, who was visiting from the United States, reportedly found her unresponsive and performed CPR before emergency services arrived.
At the time, WA Police said its major crime squad detectives were investigating the death but that it appeared non-suspicious.
This week, the WA Coroner’s office told The Nightly that Giuffre’s death had since been referred to the Coroner’s Court.
“The Court is investigating the circumstances surrounding Ms Giuffre’s death,” a spokeswoman said on Wednesday.
“The Court does not make public those investigations but will inform the senior next of kin of those investigations.”
Giuffre, who had recently reverted to her maiden name of Roberts, was one of the most prominent accusers of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
The mother-of-three successfully sued Epstein in 2015, alleging that he and convicted sex offender Ghislaine Maxwell, had sex-trafficked her when she was just 16 years old in 2000.
She also accused Prince Andrew of sexually assaulting her when she was 17.
The Duke, who repeatedly denied the claims, paid Giuffre an estimated £7.3million ($15 million) in an out-of-court settlement in February 2022 without accepting any liability.

The fierce advocate for abuse victims is believed to have amassed considerable wealth in recent years.
Giuffre and her husband had paid cash for four properties in WA before they split.
The couple had bought three properties, all within a few kilometres of each other, in Perth’s northern suburbs.
In mid-2020, they purchased a palatial six-bedroom home with stunning ocean views in the beachside suburb of Ocean Reef for $1.9 million.
In August 2022 the couple purchased, in their company name, a six-bedroom house in Heathridge for $865,000.
In October 2022 they paid $895,000 for a five-bedroom property in the nearby suburb of Connolly.
And in July 2023, the couple paid $1.2 million for a 16.48ha rural retreat at Neergabby, about an hour north of Perth.
The Neergabby property had been re-listed for sale in August, September and October 2022, which indicates the couple may have briefly tried to sell it – for the same price – before taking it off the market.


Property records show all four of the couple’s properties are “owner-occupied” and mortgage-free.
Following her marriage breakdown, the American-born activist moved into the couple’s farmhouse at Neergabby, where she later died.
This comes as President Donald Trump struggled on Wednesday to contain the fallout from his administration’s decision not to release the Epstein files, as Republicans in the House went home for August instead of grappling with the issue and a Florida court declined to release grand jury testimony from the case.
And a new report in the Wall Street Journal describes how Attorney General Pam Bondi and her deputy informed the President in May that his name appeared “multiple times” in the files, along with those of “many people” who socialised with Epstein.
If you know more about this story, contact kristin.shorten@thenightly.com.au
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