Virginia Giuffre's co-writer says she knows the Epstein list names

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Editor’s Note: This story contains discussions of rape or sexual assault that may be disturbing. Reader discretion is advised. If you or someone you know has been sexually assaulted, you can find help and discreet resources on the National Sexual Assault Hotline website or by calling 1-800-656-4673.

(NewsNation) — Virginia Giuffre's posthumous 400-page memoir dropped Tuesday, detailing her trafficking under Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, including hints at other abusers.

Co-writer Amy Wallace joined NewsNation's "Banfield" on Tuesday to discuss the memoir, "Nobody's Girl," which includes details of beatings, depraved sex acts and allegations that deceased sex offender Epstein spoke about blackmailing various powerful people with tapes of them having sex with underage girls.

Wallace says she has tapes of her own, including private recordings in which the men were named.

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She added the memoir describes a “predator's playbook,” a step-by-step manual for how girls are groomed, trapped and destroyed.

Amy Wallace says she knows the names

Wallace spent four years writing "Nobody’s Girl" side-by-side with Giuffre, and she told "Banfield" something she’d never said publicly before.

Wallace still has the tapes — every recorded conversation she had with Giuffre, including the ones in which Giuffre named names.

"I know all the names ... that are there, but every different scene, she had to make a decision about whether or not she was going to rename or name these people."

As to whether these names will ever be released, Wallace says the Department of Justice should be held accountable.

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"Yes, I know who the names are. Virginia knows who the names are, but so does the FBI and so does the Department of Justice. That's why there's such a clamoring right now for the Epstein files to be released," she said.

"It's not just Virginia who's come forward. It's many, many brave women who came forward and talked to investigators."

Epstein list with feds for a decade: Amy Wallace

Naturally, Wallace also tells NewsNation a list itself does exist: "It exists in the FBI files. It exists in the Epstein files, as we now call them.

"She had named many names and depositions already that have been made public," she said of Giuffre. "There are four different document dumps, and there are many, many names in those."

The long-rumored Epstein ledger of rich, famous, powerful men who allegedly took part in his trafficking ring has been with the federal government for a long time, according to Wallace.

"They have the names, and they've had them for more than a decade," she said.

While "aware someone could steal" her tapes, Wallace says they are currently "safe."

"Nobody can find them, so don't break into my house. No one will be able to find them," she added.

Men Virginia Giuffre alleges being trafficked to

While Giuffre doesn’t list every name, she leaves behind clues.

Giuffre names some abusers already identified in past legal filings — including Prince Andrew, who settled a lawsuit with her in 2022 — and hints at others described only by their positions: a former U.S. senator, a governor, a psychology professor and even a “well-known prime minister” who brutally assaulted her.

"I came to be trafficked to a multitude of powerful men… . Among them were a gubernatorial candidate who was soon to win an election in a Western state and a former U.S. Senator," Giuffre wrote.

"The second person I was lent out to was a psychology professor whose research Epstein was helping to fund," she said.

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Giuffre mentions a “heralded statesman” she was lent to in New York and Palm Beach, the oldest man to whom Epstein ever trafficked her.

She also describes being forced to service who she calls "billionaire number one" and his pregnant wife, as well as "billionaire number two," a 52-year-old man with “thinning brown hair.”

She writes that Epstein wired his homes for audio and video, using the recordings as leverage over influential figures.

President Trump uninvolved: Virginia Giuffre

For years, President Donald Trump's name has been mentioned in connection with Epstein, and his Florida resort, Mar-a-Lago, was the doorway to Giuffre’s nightmare, according to Wallace.

So, many expected her to implicate him, but she does the opposite. Giuffre cleared Trump, writing that during her years of abuse, she never witnessed him involved in Epstein's sex trafficking ring.

"Virginia was in the Epstein-Maxwell orbit for about 24 months, a little longer, and so she only knows about that period. But in that period, she didn't see Trump in any sort of compromising position," Wallace said.

"She knew Donald Trump because she worked there. She was honored to work there."

Wallace added that Giuffre "felt very validated" when Trump campaigned on releasing the Epstein files before the presidential election.

Allegations against Prince Andrew

The memoir also expands on allegations made against Prince Andrew. Giuffre alleges she was trafficked to the disgraced royal three times.

The third time, she alleges, was during a nine-woman orgy with him and Epstein, in which every other girl “appeared under 18 and didn’t speak English.”

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Days later, she says, she woke up in a pool of blood. Epstein rushed her to a hospital, whispering to a medic about her care. Doctors told her she might never have children, though she later did.

One account in the memoir involves a man she calls a "well-known prime minister."

“Epstein trafficked me to a man who raped me more savagely than anyone had before. He repeatedly choked me until I lost consciousness. ... I emerged from the cabana bleeding from my mouth, vagina, and anus.”

She says she begged Epstein never to send her back, and he refused.

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