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Great points, hedda. The media should have investigated how she was helping victims, not just take the claims at face value. But it seems pretty unlikely they'll do so now.
The article says her brother and sister-in law "have taken up Virginia’s mantel [sic] with the charity Soar, campaigning across the US to help pass legislation to help protect the victims of abuse" and has a photo of them standing at a lecturn with people behind them holding banners saying "New York pass A101/S54" and "intoxication is not consent". But the SOAR website looks as moribund as ever and hasn't been updated to take account of Virginia Giuffre's death.
The family of sex trafficking victim Virginia Giuffre have launched a public fundraiser in her memory, because they expect it will take years to divide up her rich estate.
They are seeking to raise $15,000 to build a memorial in her memory that will be open for the public to visit. ...
Her family, anticipating a drawn-out process of dividing her assets, have launched a GoFundMe appeal for the mother-of-three in the meantime so she can have a 'permanent mark in this world'. ... GoFundMe - Honor Virginia: A Legacy for Justice Only 8% of the target has been raised.
hedda
The pursuit of money brought no happiness.
She lived in fairly joyless towns where big houses & flashiness dominate but it's obvious she and her husband had no direction.
I thought that farm looked awful..remote, lonely and desolate.
Not one media outlet has given a single example of her efforts to "help victims".