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During a recent episode of The Kim Iversen Show, independent journalist Kim Iversen explored the shocking revelations in the posthumous memoir of Jeffrey Epstein’s most outspoken accuser, Virginia Giuffre (also known as Virginia Roberts).
During the episode, Iversen characterized the book, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, as both “horrific in its details and alarming in its implications.” She suggested that the memoir uncovers a sprawling network of political and elite corruption that has consistently managed to dodge accountability.
Prior to her reported suicide earlier this year, Giuffre had been adamant that her memoir be published regardless of her fate. “She was resolute about revealing the truth,” Iversen noted. “The publication of this book was her ultimate stand against a regime of power, manipulation, and silence.”
The memoir offers chilling narratives of Giuffre’s experiences of abuse by Epstein and numerous influential figures within his circle. Notably, she details being brutally attacked by a “sadistic prime minister,” purportedly a former Israeli leader. “She recounts being beaten, strangled until she lost consciousness, and left bleeding,” Iversen recounted, referencing the memoir’s passages. “It’s profoundly disturbing.”
While the memoir omits the direct naming of the official for legal protection, Iversen highlighted that Giuffre’s past testimonies had identified the alleged perpetrator as former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak. “The timeline, setting, and specifics all align with Barak — someone who maintained long-standing ties with Epstein through business, politics, and visits to his private island and New York properties,” Iversen remarked. “He refutes the claims, but this is not the first instance his name has been mentioned.”

The discussion ventured into Giuffre’s coded mentions of other individuals within Epstein’s circle: “Billionaire 1,” “Billionaire 2,” a “soon-to-be governor,” and a “former U.S. senator.” Drawing from Giuffre’s previously unsealed legal documents, Iversen suggested these could likely reference hedge fund manager Glenn Dubin, billionaire Thomas Pritzker, former New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, and ex-Senator George Mitchell — all of whom have denied the accusations.
“These individuals are emblematic of a seemingly untouchable echelon of power,” Iversen stated. “They were not only protected by Epstein’s wealth but also by institutions too intimidated — or too compromised — to bring their actions to light.”
The segment also examined how Epstein’s blackmail operation, disguised as a network of influence, leveraged sexual abuse to control world leaders. “What this operation really was,” Iversen argued, “was industrial-scale blackmail. Epstein wasn’t just a criminal — he was a tool of intelligence and foreign power.” She noted widespread speculation that Epstein’s empire served as a Mossad-linked operation, designed to gather kompromat on politicians and business moguls across the West.
Iversen displayed profound outrage at how these revelations have failed to produce accountability. “Everyone knew,” she said. “From Donald Trump’s casual comments about Epstein’s ‘liking them young,’ to the lavish parties where underage girls walked freely, this wasn’t hidden. It was normalized — and that’s the most horrifying part.”
She showed a photo of Giuffre as a teenager alongside Ghislaine Maxwell and supermodel Naomi Campbell, observing how clearly Giuffre appeared to be a minor. “They didn’t even try to hide it,” Iversen said. “These were children paraded in front of the wealthy, the political elite, and royalty. Everyone looked the other way.”

Giuffre’s allegations against Prince Andrew also resurfaced. She recounted how Maxwell told her she would be meeting “a prince today” — not realizing that meant being trafficked to him later that night. “Even royalty was involved,” Iversen said grimly. “Giuffre describes being given alcohol, taken to a club, and later forced to perform sexually for Prince Andrew. Her words are painful because they reveal not just exploitation, but how the world’s most powerful men treated victims as disposable.”
For Iversen, this scandal extends beyond Epstein’s crimes to symbolize a larger moral and political rot. “This isn’t just about Virginia Giuffre’s suffering,” she said. “It’s about how American democracy — our leaders, our media, our intelligence agencies — allowed this system of corruption and sexual exploitation to endure. Epstein’s operation consumed girls’ lives and corrupted the decisions of governments.”
She warned that the scale of control built through blackmail may have shaped everything from foreign wars to domestic policy. “How many people have suffered, how many countries destabilized, because our politicians were compromised?” she asked. “We may never know how deep this goes.”
Concluding her show, Iversen lamented how promises of transparency were repeatedly broken. “Trump promised to release the Epstein files — and he didn’t,” she said. “Neither has Biden. No one will because too many of them are implicated.”
She ended with a plea for political independence: “At this point, the only answer is to reject the entire system — stop voting for anyone who apologizes for or associates with the Israeli state, because Epstein almost certainly worked for them. America has been bribed, blackmailed, and brainwashed. We need leaders who are truly America First.”
With Nobody’s Girl, Iversen said, Giuffre’s voice still carries. “Her body may be gone, but her words expose something the powerful cannot bury: the truth.”
Watch the full episode from The Kim Iversen Show: