Episode Details
Back to Episodes
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and the Evidence Trail Virginia Left Behind (5/27/26)
Published 10 hours ago
Description
Police investigating Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor are reportedly seeking the Metropolitan Police files connected to Virginia Giuffre as part of a widening inquiry into alleged sexual misconduct, fraud, corruption, and misconduct in public office. The focus is not only on Giuffre’s long-standing allegations that Andrew sexually abused her when she was 17 after she was trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell — claims Andrew has denied — but also on what British authorities knew, what they previously reviewed, and whether earlier decisions by the Met left key material untouched. Giuffre gave a statement to the Met in 2015, later sued Andrew in the United States, and reached a multimillion-pound civil settlement with him in 2022 without any admission of liability. Now, after her death in 2025, investigators are reportedly looking back at those files to determine whether there is evidence that should feed into the current probe.
The investigation also appears to be examining Andrew’s wider conduct around Epstein, including claims that he used or attempted to use official channels, taxpayer-funded protection officers, or confidential information to protect himself or discredit Giuffre. One major thread involves allegations that Andrew passed Giuffre’s personal information to a police protection officer in 2011 while trying to dig up damaging material on her shortly before the infamous photograph of Andrew, Giuffre, and Maxwell became public. The Met previously said it found no basis for further action on that issue, but Thames Valley Police are now reportedly reviewing the broader record, including past police handling, Andrew’s former royal protection detail, and evidence emerging from Epstein-related document releases. The significance is obvious: this is no longer just about Andrew’s old denials or the civil settlement — it is about whether British law enforcement failed to fully confront the Epstein connection when it mattered most.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
source:
Police probing Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor over 'sex offences' will 'seek late accuser Virginia Giuffre's files' | Daily Mail Online
The investigation also appears to be examining Andrew’s wider conduct around Epstein, including claims that he used or attempted to use official channels, taxpayer-funded protection officers, or confidential information to protect himself or discredit Giuffre. One major thread involves allegations that Andrew passed Giuffre’s personal information to a police protection officer in 2011 while trying to dig up damaging material on her shortly before the infamous photograph of Andrew, Giuffre, and Maxwell became public. The Met previously said it found no basis for further action on that issue, but Thames Valley Police are now reportedly reviewing the broader record, including past police handling, Andrew’s former royal protection detail, and evidence emerging from Epstein-related document releases. The significance is obvious: this is no longer just about Andrew’s old denials or the civil settlement — it is about whether British law enforcement failed to fully confront the Epstein connection when it mattered most.
to contact me:
bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
source:
Police probing Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor over 'sex offences' will 'seek late accuser Virginia Giuffre's files' | Daily Mail Online