In late 2020, Giuffre purchased the $1.9 million AUD (£1m) property, which is believed to have been possibly funded by previous large out-of-court settlements related to Epstein and his former girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell.
The residence comes with a deluxe, upper-level master suite and parents’ retreat, with an entertainment room, a spa, huge walk-in wardrobe, a balcony overlooking the sea and even a “make-up nook”.
By all accounts, Giuffre has largely kept to herself, apart from occasional trips to the shops, hairdressers and ferrying her three busy teenage children – two sons in their mid to late teens, and a daughter aged 12 – to school and to their various sporting and social activities.
Sometimes, friends of her children look her up on Google, leaving her to have to explain and reassure her brood yet again exactly why she is currently one of the most famous household names in the world.
“They have friends that say: ‘Oh my god, is this your mum?’ ” Giuffre explained in an interview with New York website The Cut in December. “It’s a lot for them to carry. But they’re teenagers. They’re at that prime era in life where I think it’s important to teach them about sex trafficking.”
As well as the ability to live a life largely unnoticed in Western Australia, Giuffre also does regular therapy sessions and yoga, as she revealed just recently, to ease what she describes as sleepless nights routinely disturbed by vivid dreams about her abusers.
“I’m doing as many things to clear my mind as possible so that I can be sharp and focused when it matters,” she said.