Virginia Giuffre’s father doesn’t believe that the late outspoken victim of Jeffrey Epstein took her own life.
“I don’t think she committed suicide,” Sky Roberts said on Thursday’s episode of “Piers Morgan Uncensored.”
The grieving dad said there was “no way” that Giuffre died by suicide and said he “couldn’t even believe it” when he learned of her death.
“I mean, I started crying right away. I’m still crying. I can’t believe that this is happening. It just, it’s impossible,” he said. “And then for them to say that she committed suicide, there’s no way that she did. Somebody got to her.”
Roberts explained that Giuffre was “very strong” and had “so much to live for.”
“She had her foundation,” he said of her support system.
Roberts wants his daughter’s legacy to be that of someone who “actually got out of a bad situation and made a good situation out of it.”
Roberts also wants the world to know that she was helping other women who were feeling the same pain that she felt.
The mourning parent stands by everything Giuffre had said about Epstein and his accomplices, including Prince Andrew.
“I believed everything that she said. You know, I mean, she was my daughter,” he said.
He even shared that Giuffre had sent him the original photo of her with Andrew many years ago — before her involvement became “public knowledge.”
“Virginia sent the original picture, so I know it wasn’t faked, but the original picture of Prince Andrew and her with Ghislaine Maxwell in the background, so I know that’s true that she did. She was there with him,” he said.
Giuffre sued Andrew in 2021 for sexual assault and claimed he allegedly raped her when she was a teenager as part of Epstein’s sex trafficking ring.
The Duke of York, 65, settled the case out of court, paying her an estimated $12 million in 2022, though he denied any wrongdoing.
Roberts believes the settlement alone is proof of Andrew’s involvement.
“I mean, it kind of admits guilt when you do that, when you pay somebody off like that, just, when Jeffrey Epstein paid, when Maxwell paid, it’s admitting guilt,” he told Morgan, asking, “I mean, why would he spend 12 or 15 million to give to her?”
Roberts said he doesn’t “care” for Andrew and labeled him a “powerful royal figure” who does whatever he wants.
Giuffre’s family confirmed that she died by suicide on April 25. She was 41.
“Giuffre lost her life to suicide, after being a lifelong victim of sexual abuse and sex trafficking,” her family wrote in a statement given to People at the time.
“Virginia was a fierce warrior in the fight against sexual abuse and sex trafficking,” the statement continued. “She was the light that lifted so many survivors. Despite all the adversity she faced in her life, she shone so bright. She will be missed beyond measure. The light of her life were her children Christian, Noah, and Emily.”
Giuffre left a chilling handwritten note upon her death in which she wrote, “Mothers, Fathers, Sisters, and Brothers need to show the battle lines are drawn, and we stand together to fight for the future of victims.”
“Is protesting the answer? I don’t know. But we’ve got to start somewhere,” she added.
Several weeks before her untimely death, Giuffre claimed she was fighting for her life after allegedly being hit by a school bus.
However, a spokesperson for the Western Australia Police Force (WAPF) expressed doubts over her claims, saying they received a report of a “minor crash” between a bus and a car on March 24 but no injuries were reported.
Six days after the crash, Giuffre was released from the hospital.
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