Prince Andrew’s ex-girlfriend Lady Victoria Hervey is casting doubt on claims by Virginia Giuffre, who accused the royal of sexually abusing her as a teen, that she has “days to live.”
Hervey, 48, took to her Instagram Stories on Monday, March 31, to weigh in on Giuffre’s social media post the day prior. Giuffre, 41, had shared a disturbing selfie in which her face was bruised. She claimed that she was hit by a school bus traveling at 110 kilometers per hour (approximately 70 miles per hour), and as a result, doctors said she only had four days to live.
“If Virginia Giuffre really does have days to live then a complete confession is needed,” Hervey stated Monday. “I don’t believe it though, the FBI are on her right now and arrest warrants are incoming: She’s conveniently dying to evade jail.”
The aristocrat claimed that “reliable sources” had told her that “the FBI went to [Giuffre] recently with evidence/proof that she lied with recordings where she admits nothing ever happened with Prince Andrew.”
Hervey mentioned Virginia’s estranged husband, Robert Guiffre, adding that “it’s time” for him “to speak I know he knows the truth of the fake photo and all her con jobs.” (Virginia and Robert share three children.)
Us Weekly has reached out to Giuffre for comment.
Giuffre met former Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell in 2000 while working as a locker room attendant at now-President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort. Maxwell introduced Giuffre to Epstein, and the pair later allegedly brought her into their sex trafficking operation. Epstein was arrested on federal sex trafficking charges in 2019 and died by suicide while in prison that August. In 2021, Maxwell was found guilty of recruiting young women for Epstein to traffic and abuse.
Giuffre also alleged that Prince Andrew abused her in 2001. In an interview with the BBC in 2019, Andrew said he didn’t remember meeting her. She filed a lawsuit against the prince in August 2021. The case was settled out of court in February 2022 for an undisclosed amount of money.
“The pain caused by her lies — destroying lives and tearing families apart, all for money — is no small thing,” Hervey continued on Monday via her Instagram Stories. “She has a lot to answer for. I call this divine judgment by God. People often say karma has a way of catching up, don’t they? What goes around comes around, and someone who’s caused that much harm might just find the truth closing in on them one day. When it does, it’s rarely pretty. Whether in this life or beyond, the weight of those choices tends to find a way to settle the score.”
Sharing feedback from her followers, Hervey noted, “Another good point from someone is: Generally when you’re dying you’re not thinking about posting a selfie, you’re actually dying!!!”
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