Spoiler alert.

Nobody’s Girl‘, the memoirs of the late Virginia Giuffre (née Roberts), has just been published. Giuffre was trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell to Andrew Mountbatten Winsor for sexual abuse as a minor. She committed suicide last April.

On the same day her book appeared, a slew of similar looking publications went on sale on Amazon and other online retailers. (Examine the picture below. Can you spot the one written by Giuffre?)

They are ‘independently published’ in Italy and possibly elsewhere around the globe. They are available on what is known as ‘print on demand’ (POD). The POD process permits an individual to purchase a single copy of a book which is held in a digital format online. All sorts of books – including ones which are otherwise out of print – are available this way.

An Amazon reviewer called McCauley described her purchase as feeling ‘like an AI-generated garbage account’ with the ‘same vague main general reports from news’. It did ‘not go into any detail. I think there is severe repetition of the same passages and headings and it really doesn’t go anywhere. Do not buy it.’

A reviewer of ‘Her Story of Becoming Nobody’s Girl‘ asked, ‘Did [Giuffre] actually write this?’ Clearly, she did not.

Another reviewer, called Deborah Shea, was ‘dissatisfied’ with her purchase stating that it was a ‘very small paperback book, not as expected’.

A reviewer of Unsilenced felt that it was of ‘poor quality, loads of blank pages, not worth (the) price.’

A lot of the books are about 80 pages long. They retail at about €18 each.

A pattern is beginning to emerge. Earlier this year, Chris Moore published ‘Kincora: Britain’s Shame‘, which contained many revelations about Lord Mountbatten’s involvement in the Kincora Boys’ Home scandal. At the same time that it appeared, an AI-generated spoiler called ‘Kincora’s Lost Boys: The Truth MI5 Buried‘ appeared. No author was identified on the cover or anywhere else in the book.

Kincora’s Lost Boys‘ (KLB) purported to delve into the Kincora child sex abuse scandal but offered not a single new revelation. It was riddled with inaccuracies, potentially rivalling the much derided Hart Report of 2017, which also purported to investigate Kincora. In contrast, Chris Moore’s book produced detailed evidence that Kincora was exploited as a ‘honeytrap’ by MI5 to compromise Unionist politicians and paramilitaries.

KLB‘ asserted that Moore broke the Kincora scandal with an article in the Irish Independent in January 1980. The piece was actually written by Peter McKenna. Moore never claimed the credit for it. 

Chris Moore.

KLB‘ leaned heavily on the Hart Report, stating that Hart found ‘no proof of [MI5] complicity or a wider paedophile ring involving high-profile figures.

The publication defended Mountbatten’s reputation, despite allegations that he abused boys in Ireland alleging that ‘no declassified MI5 documents mention Mountbatten in connection with Kincora’. This overlooks that numerous Kincora files remain classified by MI5 and are not scheduled for release until 2085.

Andrew Lownie.

The publication questioned the ‘logistics of the claims’ surrounding Mountbatten, arguing that ‘no Garda or RUC records confirm’ his involvement. This ignores the fact that the Gardai have refused to release the security logs for Mountbatten’s residence in Classiebawn. Andrew Lownie and I sought them a number of years ago to no avail.

KLB‘ asserted that the Belfast Welfare Authority, which oversaw Kincora, was underfunded and unaware of the abuse. This was a blatant lie. Joss Cardwell, one of the abusers at Kincora, chaired the Authority. His name appeared frequently in the home’s visitor logs, and he transported boys around Belfast to abusers. Cardwell later committed suicide to avoid facing the consequences, a fact ignored in KLB.

Joss Cardwell.

Incredibly, Moore’s book was not reviewed by the mainstream press in England, Scotland and Wales. Had it been, it had every chance of becoming a bestseller in Britain. (It was widely reviewed in Ireland, where it sold – and continues to sell – very well.)

Had Moore’s book not been ‘self-censored’ by the British press, it could have shot to the top of the non-fiction bestseller lists, just as Andrew Lownie’s ‘Mountbattens‘ and ‘Entitled‘ – which were reviewed – did.

Over the summer of 2025, Moore was on the cusp of capturing the attention of the British public, with a major Kincora scandal involving Mountbatten erupting.

If the truth about Mountbatten and Kincora were ever to emerge, it would shock people even more than the former Prince Andrew-Giuffre scandal. The vice ring which swirled around Kincora was involved in the disappearance of four boys who were raped and murdered. Others committed suicide.

The wider Kincora scandal was covered up with astonishing guile by MI5 and the RUC, aided and abetted by Margaret Thatcher and an array of her cabinet. Subsequent administrations followed suit.

The appearance of the AI book on Kincora meant that anyone searching for information on Kincora, or who caught wind of Moore’s book, might have purchased the wretched ‘Kincora’s Lost Boysinstead.

Kincora’s Lost Boys’ the tatty AI generated book on Kincora, stole its title from the highly regarded 2023 documentary on Kincora by the BAFTA award winning Alleycats production company. The BBC, which commissioned the film, has yet to broadcast it.

Clearly, ‘Kincora’s Lost Boysserved as a spoiler, designed to prevent Moore’s book from gaining traction in Britain.

The common link between ‘KLB‘ and the Giuffre publication is the Royal Family.

The AI dirty trick operation wasn’t enough to save the now former Prince Andrew from losing his titles and privileges.

Prince William, one of the moving forces in the demotion in status of his uncle, has yet to root out those involved in the ABC scandal. The ABC scandal helped enable Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell and their associates, rape and traffic children during the period 2015-2018. See this article👇

Books by Nigel Cawthorne.

Another victim of the tidal wave of spoilers about Giuffre is author Nigel Cawthorne, an established writer who has recently published a book on the Giuffre affair. He is the author of a number of published titles.

If the Giuffre publication glut follows the pattern of ‘KLB‘, it will disappear from Amazon shortly.

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