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Virginia Giuffre’s oldest son has emerged publicly for the first time since he entered the legal fray concerning his late mother’s estate.
Captured exclusively by the Daily Mail, 19-year-old Christian Giuffre was seen in Perth following his and his brother Noah’s, 18, legal claim. They contend that their mother lacked the mental capacity to draft a valid will before her tragic suicide.
The dispute over the significant payout to Giuffre, who was one of Jeffrey Epstein’s most high-profile accusers, and the earnings from her recently released memoir, is now fully underway.
Just a day after filing to take charge of their mother’s estate, Christian took a leisurely break with friends at The Breakwater in Hillarys Boat Harbour. This well-known venue, offering stunning views of the Indian Ocean, is nestled in the northern coastal suburbs of Perth.
The young man arrived holding hands with a young woman sporting long red hair and a mini dress, accompanied by four other friends.
The group set off from the oceanfront Perth residence of Christian’s father, Robert, who was Virginia’s estranged husband, just before 3 p.m. on Saturday. They traveled in a two-car convoy, with Christian’s blue Toyota Hilux carrying three passengers.
The group looked happy and relaxed as they followed Christian into the hotel’s front bar and then sat around a table drinking for about an hour, leaving around 4.15pm, which was well before The Breakwater’s legendary sunset hour drinks.
Christian lit up a cigarette as they strolled along the venue’s boardwalk before the group climbed back into their cars. He politely declined to comment about his legal claims when asked, other than in general terms.
Virginia Giuffre’s son Christian is seen for the first time as he walks with a young woman after they broke cover to take the time for a few drinks with friends at a stunning oceanside pub in Perth on Saturday evening
Christian (in the green and white striped shirt) with three of his five mates who left his dad Robert Giuffre’s seafront mansion for a circuit breaker pub visit a day after he filed a legal claim for control over his mother Virginia’s fortune
Christian and the five other young mates drove in convoy from Robert Giuffre’s house down to The Breakwater for a quiet drink the day after the legal move by him and brother Noah signalled the start of the fight over his mum Virginia’s millions
Virginia Giuffre pictured earlier this year at Gin Gin north of Perth near the Neergabby farm she owned where she sadly took her life on April 25
The two brothers are embroiled in a legal stoush with two women who were their mother’s closest confidantes when she died.
Viriginia’s former lawyer Karrie Louden and Cheryl Myers, her carer and housekeeper at the farm where the 41-year-old took her life in April are on opposing sides in a fight over Giuffre’s estate.
The existence of an unsigned will has emerged as the crux of the competing claims between Giuffre’s sons and Ms Myers and Ms Louden.
On Thursday, Christian Giuffre told the Daily Mail at the door of his father’s Ocean Reef house in Perth that while he didn’t want to comment on the looming conflict, he believed it would be ‘a lawyer fest’ and he didn’t particularly like lawyers.
On Friday, following a case management hearing between the opposing sides in the WA supreme Court, documents including multiple claims and counterclaims revealed the extent of the division between the parties all vying for control of Virginia’s assets.
The documents show that in the weeks before her death on April 25, Giuffre wrote a will and requested Karrie Louden have it formally drawn up.
Ms Louden and Ms Myers don’t dispute the fact that Giuffre died at her farm in Neergabby, 80km north of Perth, before she could sign the will or have it witnessed, as per the legal requirements of the Wills Act, which left the estate officially intestate.
Christian, 19, arrived at pub which overlooks the Indian Ocean holdings hands with the yoiung woman featured alongside him in this picture. They and four other friends looked relaxed as they too a brief hour out of Saturday afternoon to socialise together
Christian and his friends on the boardwalk at Hillarys Boat Harbour in Perth’s coastal north stroll back from a brief drink at The Breakwater pub the day after his late mother’s will battle hit the WA Supreme Court
Virginia as young woman with the former Prince Andrew and Jeffrey Epstein cohort Ghislaine Maxwell in the photo which would prove to be the dynamite which helped cost Andrew his royal title
Their claim argues the court should recognise verbal and written instructions they received as an ‘informal will’, which under WA law allows certain documents or notes to be validated as expressing a person’s intentions for their estate.
‘On 27 February 2025, the deceased created an informal will in writing,’ the pair’s defence counterclaim states.
‘On 2 April 2025, the deceased provided verbal instructions to the first defendant [Louden], in the presence of the second defendant [Myers], to prepare a will to be executed in accordance with … the Wills Act.’
An attachment to the counterclaim, possibly a note written by Giuffre, reads: ‘I appoint Cheryl Myers and Karrie Louden as my executors and trustees.’. Another reads, ‘Karrie/Cheryl to be executor’.
Virginia’s sons reject these claims that these documents represent their mother’s final intentions.
‘Such instructions were preliminary instructions in contemplation of preparing a will, which was not prepared,’ one of court documents states.
‘The deceased did not intend for such instructions to constitute her will.’
One of the WA Supreme Court documents state Giuffre’s estate is worth more than $472,000, which is a legal threshold in Western Australia which governs how assets are divided when there is no will.
Christian Giuffre politely declined twice to the Daily Mail to comment about his legal claims on this mother’s estate, other than saying in general terms he didn’t like lawyers
Christian, 19, pulls his Toyota Hilux into the carpark at Hillarys Boat Harbour in Perth’s coastal north on Saturday afternoon where he and five friends headed for a quick drink
Virginia with husband Robert Guiffre, from whom she was estranged at the time of her death. The couple had three children together, Christian, Noah and a daughter, 15
Disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein took his own life in prison after being accused of sex trafficking underage girls, the most vocal of whom has proven to be Virginia Giuffre
But it is estimated the real worth of what Virginia Giuffre left behind is what is left of the reported $24.5m settlement she received from the former Prince Andrew.
Andrew Mounbatten-Windsor has denied all of the allegations she made about being sex trafficked to the royal when she was 17 years old. The $24.5million payout she received from him included no admissions of liability.
Giuffre also received $770,000 from disgraced financier Epstien who died in prison, and an undisclosed sum from jailed sex trafficker and Epstein cohort Ghislaine Maxwell following a defamation suit.
Profits from Giuffre’s memoir ‘Nobody’s Girl’ are included in the estate.
On Friday, WA Supreme Court Registrar Danielle Davies recommended that Robert Giuffre join his sons in civil proceedings to take control of his late wife’s will.
‘My understanding is that Robert’s consent was attached to an application for a non-contentious grant (from the will),’ Ms Davies told the court.
‘He would consent to the grant being made to his sons, but now there’s defence and counter claims, which would remove his entitlement.’