“Yes, I know who the names are,” Amy Wallace told News Nation’s “Banfield” on Tuesday of those tied to the notorious, now-deceased sex trafficker.
“Virginia [knew] who the names are, but so does the FBI and so does the Department of Justice,” the “Nobody’s Girl” co-author insisted.
“That’s why there’s such a clamoring right now for the Epstein files to be released.”
Wallace, who spent four years writing the book, said she still had all the tapes of her recorded conversations with Giuffre — including the ones where she detailed those involved with Epstein.
“I know all the names … that are there, but every different scene, she had to make a decision about whether or not she was going to rename or name these people,” Wallace said, without identifying anyone new.
The writer alleged, too, that the feds have had the so-called list for a decade.
“It exists in the FBI files. It exists in the Epstein files, as we now call them. [Giuffre] had named many names and depositions already that have been made public,” she said.
“There are four different document dumps, and there are many, many names in those,” Wallace continued.
“They have the names — and they’ve had them for more than a decade.”
Wallace noted that she’d hidden her tapes amid fears someone could try and steal them.
“Nobody can find them, so don’t break into my house. No one will be able to find them,” she said.
The author had finished Giuffre’s memoir before the late accuser died by suicide in April.
The book revisits Giuffre’s allegations involving the men who socialized with Epstein — including Prince Andrew, who she sued in 2021, claiming that they had sex when she was 17.
The author had finished Giuffre’s memoir before the late accuser died by suicide in April.
In many instances, the names of the men have been left out of the book, with Giuffre writing that she either didn’t know them or feared retaliation.