Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre sues Prince Andrew over alleged sexual abuse
Virginia Roberts Giuffre, one of the women who accused Jeffrey Epstein, filed a lawsuit on Monday alleging she was sexually abused by Prince Andrew. The lawsuit, filed in New York, alleges that Andrew sexually abused Giuffre when she was 17 years old, and forced her to engage in sexual acts against her will on three separate occasions.
"Today my attorney filed suit against Andrew for sexual abuse under the Child Victims Act," Giuffre said in a statement to CBS News. "As the suit lays out in detail, I was trafficked to him and sexually abused by him."
Giuffre said she is filing the lawsuit to "[hold] Prince Andrew accountable for what he did to me."
Giuffre alleges that Prince Andrew sexually abused her on three separate occasions in 2001 and 2002, with one of the incidents occurring at Epstein's mansion in New York City. The lawsuit claims Prince Andrew forced Giuffre "to engage in sex acts against her will" during that encounter. In another alleged incident in London, Giuffre claims she was forced to have sexual intercourse with Andrew against her will.
Because of Andrew's alleged abuse, the lawsuit says, Giuffre has suffered "substantial damages, including extreme emotional distress, humiliation, fear, psychological trauma, loss of dignity and self-esteem, and invasion of her privacy."
"Twenty years ago Prince Andrew's wealth, power, position, and connections enabled him to abuse a frightened, vulnerable child with no one there to protect her," the lawsuit said. "It is long past the time for him to be held to account."
Although the statute of limitations had initially passed for Giuffre's allegations against Andrew, the 2019 Child Victims Act allows survivors of childhood sexual abuse to file claims regardless of when the abuse was alleged to have occurred. The window for these claims to be filed was originally set to expire in 2020, but New York Governor Andrew Cuomo last year extended the deadline to August 14, 2021 due to the coronavirus pandemic's impact on the court system,
David Boies, an attorney representing Giuffre, told CBS News that "justice here, for Virginia and for other victims, first and foremost, is vindication."
"Part of what Virginia is doing, both through lawsuits like this and through the foundation that she's established, is trying to make sure that what happened to her doesn't happen to other young girls," Boies added.
Boies also praised the "look back window" laws that allow survivors to bring claims after the statute of limitations had passed.
"They don't understand their rights, they're frightened, they're vulnerable, and for a period of time after the abuse, they simply want to get away, as Virginia did. She fled to Australia," he explained. "They're not thinking about vindicating their rights. And so the legislature, I think, wisely said, we need to give them an opportunity after they've had a chance to recover, to decide to bring lawsuits."
Andrew has previously denied Giuffre's claims, telling the BBC in 2019, "I can absolutely categorically tell you it never happened."
In her own BBC interview, Giuffre said "He knows what happened. I know what happened and there's only one of us telling the truth, and I know that's me."
Andrew also claimed in the interview that he had "no recollection" of ever meeting Giuffre, despite there being apparent photographic evidence of the two of them together with Epstein's former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, who is accused of helping Epstein traffic underage girls. Maxwell is currently in custody in New York and awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, to which she has pleaded not guilty. Maxwell's attorneys did not respond to CBS News' request for comment.
In 2019, Epstein took his own life in prison after being arrested on sex trafficking charges in New York.
On Monday, the administrator of the fund created to compensate victims who were sexually assaulted by Jeffrey Epstein announced that $121 million has been paid out to 150 people.
Nikki Battiste contributed reporting.