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New suit: One Epstein accuser says 2nd accuser defamed her

In this Aug. 27, 2019, photo, Virginia Giuffre, center, who says she was trafficked by sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, holds a news conference outside a Manhattan court where sexual assault claimants invited by a judge addressed a hearing following Epstein's jailhouse death in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews) In this Aug. 27, 2019, photo, Virginia Giuffre, center, who says she was trafficked by sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, holds a news conference outside a Manhattan court where sexual assault claimants invited by a judge addressed a hearing following Epstein's jailhouse death in New York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
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A woman who says financer Jeffrey Epstein sexually abused her has sued another Epstein accuser for defamation, citing a series of year-old tweets.

Rina Oh filed the lawsuit in Manhattan federal court late Thursday, citing a series of tweets by Virginia Giuffre, who recently sued Prince Andrew, claiming she was coerced into sexual encounters with him. Giuffre has said she was one of many girls and young women sexually abused by Epstein.

Oh said authorities including the FBI have agreed with her that she was a young victim of Epstein 20 years ago and not a co-conspirator or part of his inner circle.

Yet, she maintained, Giuffre asserted in a series of October 2020 tweets that Oh was Epstein's girlfriend and recruited girls for him to abuse.

鈥淩ina- if you read this I hope you live in shame for the rest of your life,鈥 said a portion of one tweet cited in the lawsuit.

Another tweet said Oh should be 鈥渟itting in jail鈥 next to Ghislaine Maxwell.

Maxwell, 59, goes to trial in Manhattan in November to face charges that she recruited teenage girls in the mid-1990s for Epstein to sexually abuse and sex trafficked a teenage girl in the early 2000s. She has pleaded not guilty.

Another tweet cited in the lawsuit said Giuffre accused Oh of leaving a 6-inch scar on her leg from one of their encounters two decades ago.

The lawsuit, though, said none of that was true, and that Giuffre 鈥渉as maliciously reiterated and republished these defamations and slanders in prior and subsequent tweets and interviews on podcasts, TV and for magazines, as well as in her memoirs entitled `Billionaire's Playboy Club.鈥'

The 鈥渄efamations and slanders鈥 are causing Oh 鈥済reat harm,鈥 including humiliation, shame, disgrace, mental anguish, loss of life enjoyment and anxiety and emotion distress,鈥 the lawsuit said.

The lawsuit, which sought $20 million in damages, was aiming at stopping what it called 鈥渇alse and defamatory bile.鈥

Lawyers for Giuffre did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment.

The Associated Press does not identify alleged victims of sexual abuse unless they decide to tell their stories publicly, as Oh has done in interviews and a podcast and Giuffre has done as well.

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