‘I Know The Names’: Author Says She Has Secret Recordings of One of Epstein’s Most Prominent Victims

Staff Writer
(Left) Virginia Giuffre, who exposed Epstein’s trafficking ring. (Right) Amy Wallace, the writer who helped tell her story. (Screenshots via YouTube)

The woman who helped write Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir just threw gasoline on a fire that still hasn’t gone out. Amy Wallace, the ghostwriter behind Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, says she has secret recordings — and she knows exactly who the names are.

“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,” Wallace told NewsNation. “That’s why there’s such a clamoring right now for the Epstein files to be released.”

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In other words: the truth is out there. And more than a few powerful people may be sweating bullets.

Virginia Giuffre — the most prominent accuser in the Jeffrey Epstein scandal and the woman who stood her ground when others stayed silent — died by suicide in April at her home in Australia. Her memoir, co-written with Wallace over four years, was released posthumously. It’s raw, it’s painful, and it’s damning.

But Wallace says what’s in the book might just scratch the surface. “I’m a hired gun, I’m a hired writer, this is not my book,” she said when asked whether she would ever release the names herself. Still, she confirmed she has hours of recorded conversations with Giuffre — ones that may contain even more explosive allegations.

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And when asked if she still has those tapes? Wallace replied cryptically, “Nobody can find them… so don’t break into my house.”

That’s a warning shot if there ever was one.

While Wallace stays tight-lipped, the heat is turning up in Washington. Lawmakers have been demanding that the Department of Justice release the full Epstein files — the unredacted, unfiltered truth. But it’s politics as usual: Democrats are accusing Republicans of blocking the government just to stall the bill. Speaker Mike Johnson told Politico this week he’d support a floor vote for the discharge petition, but nothing is moving yet.

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Meanwhile, Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) told the House Judiciary Committee that the FBI knows the identities of at least 20 individuals connected to Epstein’s trafficking operation.

Still, no names. No accountability.

Watch the interview below:

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