Politicians, influencers and rank and file members of the MAGA movement have already fully rejected that Virginia Giuffre, an Epstein accuser, died by suicide.
Instead, several have baselessly posited that Giuffre was killed by the same people who wanted to keep Jeffrey Epstein quiet about illicit activities on the disgraced financier’s private island.
They are also furious with Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel for not releasing all the Epstein files in the government’s possession, believing that their exposure may have saved Giuffre’s life.
Giuffre’s family, who has not addressed the conspiracy theories, has explained that her death on Friday came as the result of the crippling trauma she faced for nearly her entire life.
‘There are no words that can express the grave loss we feel today with the passing of our sweet Virginia,’ the family’s statement reads.
‘She was heroic and will always be remembered for her incredible courage and loving spirit. In the end, the toll of abuse is so heavy that it became unbearable for Virginia to handle its weight.
‘We know that she is with the angels.’
However, the family weighing in on Giuffre’s manner of death did not stop people from theorizing on social media.
Laura Loomer, a MAGA devotee and close ally to President Donald Trump, pointed to the car crash Giuffre was in on March 24 as evidence of a conspiracy against her.
‘I don’t believe Virginia Giuffre committed suicide. Just like I don’t believe Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide. First she gets in a car crash, now they say she killed herself? Sounds like someone wanted her dead,’ Loomer wrote on X.
The accident Giuffre was in with a school bus was described as ‘minor’ by the Western Police, who also said no one suffered injuries.
Yet days later, Giuffre posted a picture of herself in the hospital to Instagram. The photograph showed discoloration to her face and chest, which has been described as severe bruising.
She wildly claimed she had ‘four days to live’ because of the bus crash and that she had kidney failure.
Her family said she had been on painkillers when she posted to Instagram and believed she was writing on a private social media page.
Weeks later, Giuffre publicly accused her husband, Robert, of domestic violence, which raised questions about why she had been in the hospital.
Robert, who has not been charged with any crime, has not spoken out on the allegations.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican congresswoman from Georgia, addressed Giuffre’s death but did not mention the car crash or the domestic abuse allegations.
In an Instagram post, the lawmaker said Giuffre died by ‘suicide,’ intentionally putting the word in quotes to cast doubt. She added that the ‘truth needs to come out more matter who is responsible.’
Bolstering Loomer’s and Greene’s idea of foul play surrounding the 41-year-old mother-of-three’s death is a post from Giuffre on Twitter, now X, in December 2019 where she said she wasn’t suicidal.
She wrote, ‘I am making it publicy (sic) known that in no way, shape or form am I sucidal (sic). I have made this known to my therapist and GP.
‘If something happens to me- in the sake of my family do not let this go away and help me to protect them. Too many evil people want to see me quiteted (sic),’ she concluded.
This post was originally made just four months after Epstein himself was found dead in his New York jail cell, apparently by hanging himself, while awaiting trial for federal sex trafficking charges.
Nancy Mace, a Republican congresswoman from South Carolina, also addressed Giuffre’s death but did not inherently point fingers.
She reposted conservative influencer Benny Johnson’s post sharing how Giuffre had previously said she wasn’t suicidal and wrote: ‘This gave me goosebumps.’
But it was regular MAGA-aligned citizens who appeared to be the most upset at what happened to Giuffre, who claimed Epstein and his confidant Ghislaine Maxwell sex trafficked her to powerful men, including Prince Andrew.
‘This is a tragic and unnecessary lost life of another Epstein victim, Virginia Giuffre. I don’t believe for a second this was another coincidental “suicide.” We’re not stupid. Epstein victims need justice! Where are the damn Epstein files anyway? It’s beyond ridiculous!’ one person wrote on X.
Many of them directly blamed the heads of the Department of Justice and the FBI, Pam Bondi and Kash Patel, respectively.
‘I fully believe Virginia Giuffre didn’t k*ll herself. She deserved justice. Pam Bondi failed her. The fbi failed her. Everybody who sat on the epstein client list failed her. She should have been protected,’ one posted on X.
Another person asked, ‘Would Virginia Giuffre still be alive if Pam Bondi had actually released the Epstein files?’
There were even calls for Bondi and Patel to step down from their posts.
Adrianne Curry, an American model, also weighed in but didn’t hold either side of the political aisle solely responsible.
‘I trust no one on either side when it comes to Epstein or his main accuser, Virginia Giuffre suddenly having cars thrown at her…then “offing” herself. It’s a big club….and we ain’t in it,’ she wrote on X.
The public speculation about Giuffre’s death mirrors the conspiracy theories that bubbled up after Epstein himself died by suicide in August 2019, with many prominent individuals insisting that it was more plausible he was murdered to bury the dirt he had on elites.
There’s no denying that Epstein had powerful friends and associates. Both Presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump have been photographed with Epstein. Prince Andrew has also been photographed with Epstein.
But the picture that has forever lived in infamy is one from 2001 where he is seen with his arm around a 17-year-old Giuffre. Maxwell, Epstein’s former lover and confidante, is standing right behind them, beaming.
Giuffre later sued Prince Andrew in civil court over her allegations of sexual abuse, a case he settled while maintaining his innocence.
The only person who was ever prosecuted for the Epstein child sex trafficking ring was Maxwell, who was convicted in 2022 and sentenced to 20 years in prison.