Devilish duo Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell pleaded with a teenage Virginia Roberts Giuffre to “have our baby” — a request that had their victim concerned they were looking to breed children for their sex trafficking ring.
The perverted proposal came along with the promise of round-the-clock nannies, a mansion and a $200,000 per month allowance — but Giuffre would have to sign all legal rights to the child over to Epstein.
“Everything about Epstein and Maxwell’s brazen request felt wrong,” Giuffre penned in her posthumous memoir, “Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice.”
“There was no way I wanted to bring a child into the world for them to raise. What if the baby were female? Was the plan for Epstein and Maxwell to have me bring that little girl up until she reached puberty, then hand her over for them to abuse?”
Giuffre, then just 18, told the pair she would fulfill their request — but instead secretly hatched an escape plan.
At that time, the summer of 2002, Giuffre had been with the pair for two years and had allegedly sustained a series of abuses at the hands of elite businessmen, including disgraced royal Prince Andrew and an unnamed Prime Minister who left her bloodied and beaten after their encounters, she claimed. Andrew has repeatedly denied the allegations.
Epstein and Maxwell’s plan to use her body as a vessel “pushed me past my breaking point,” Giuffre wrote.
The pair posed the question following an afternoon of snorkeling on Epstein’s private island in the US Virgin Islands, where the sex trafficker laid on a thick barrage of compliments and appreciation for her “devotion” to his lifestyle.
“Then he came out with it: ‘Jenna, I want you to have our baby,’” she wrote, referencing Epstein and Maxwell’s nickname for her.
“Though I’d heard him talk hypothetically about seeding the human race with his DNA, his proposal shocked me.”
Maxwell promised round-the-clock nannies, a mansion in Palm Beach or New York and “an astronomical figure of $200,000 per month.”
“But then came the conditions: like a modern-day housemaid, I would have to sign over to Epstein and Maxwell all legal rights to the child. I would have to travel with the child wherever and whenever Epstein wanted. I would have to attest, in writing, that Epstein and I were not a couple, and that the baby would remain with him if we ever had a falling out,” Giuffre alleged in the book.
The request was inconceivable for the teenager, who had suffered enough sexual abuse that pregnancy might not have been a solid possibility.
“Epstein and Maxwell had made so many demands that I had met, ignoring my own feelings in the hope of pleasing them. But this proposal would endanger another person: a helpless child. It was a bridge too far,” she continued.
“With perfect clarity, I simply knew that I couldn’t agree to their proposal. That said, I also knew I couldn’t just tell Epstein and Maxwell no. That was too dangerous. For the first time in more than two years, I began actively seeking a way to escape, buying time by pretending to think over their offer.”
Ultimately, Giuffre agreed — on the condition that the couple finally make good on their promise to put her through professional masseuse training.
Epstein sent her to the International Training Massage School in Thailand, where she was expected to continue recruiting girls for the sex trafficker.
Instead, she met her future husband, Robert Giuffre, who helped her escape the shackles of Epstein and Maxwell. The couple went on to have three children.
Neither Epstein nor Maxwell had children of their own.
The haunting tale was included in Giuffre’s memoir, set to be released next week, which she penned in the years before her tragic suicide in April. She was 41.
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