[GRADE A1 — HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_010887, HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022237, HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017935]
Virginia Roberts Giuffre's sworn federal court declaration (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_010887, January 2015) names Dershowitz directly, providing specific details across paragraphs 24-31:
The Giuffre civil complaint (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017935, Case No. 1:19-cv-03377, filed April 16, 2019) escalates the characterization: Dershowitz was "Epstein's attorney, close friend, and co-conspirator" and "a participant in sex trafficking, including as one of the men to whom Epstein lent out Plaintiff for sex."
A second accuser is documented in House Oversight files (HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022237) describing:
Sworn testimony from Epstein household employee Alfredo Rodriguez establishes:
Dershowitz's rebuttal: he "read a book with a glass of wine by the pool" and received one massage from an adult woman while keeping his underwear on.
Dershowitz has categorically denied all allegations throughout. He called them an extortion plot and a "disbarrable offense." He stated the accusers "will rue the day they ever made this false charge against me." He filed four bar complaints against victim attorneys Edwards, Cassell, Boies, and McCawley between 2015-2017 in three states (NY, DC, FL) — all were dismissed.
In November 2022, Dershowitz and Giuffre settled their mutual defamation lawsuits. Giuffre stated she "may have made a mistake" in identifying Dershowitz. The joint statement claimed the resolution "does not involve the payment of any money by anyone or anything else." The case was dismissed with prejudice.
The "no money" claim is unverifiable without access to sealed terms. The "may have made a mistake" language is a hedged factual concession in a public statement — not a judicial finding or sworn retraction.
Virginia Giuffre died by suicide on April 25, 2025, at age 41, at her home in Western Australia. Her posthumous memoir "Nobody's Girl" was published in October 2025. Her death forecloses any possibility of revisiting the "may have made a mistake" retraction under oath. The retraction was a settlement statement, not a judicial finding, and can now never be tested through cross-examination.
The v3.0 expansion significantly deepens the victim allegation record: Giuffre's declaration now includes specific location details across five sites; a second accuser is documented with conflict-of-interest implications; housekeeper testimony contradicts Dershowitz's claims about visit frequency and context. Giuffre's death in 2025 permanently freezes the evidentiary record regarding her partial retraction.
WHAT THIS SHOWS AND DOES NOT SHOW: The allegations exist in sworn federal court filings and name Dershowitz explicitly. Two separate accusers are documented. Housekeeper testimony corroborates frequent visits with massage context. Dershowitz has denied all allegations categorically. The 2022 settlement and partial retraction complicate the picture. No criminal charges have been filed. This dossier presents the full evidentiary record — allegations, denials, supporting testimony, retraction — without adjudicating truth.