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Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, embroiled in controversy, continues to hold onto his royal identity. Delivery boxes marked with ‘HRH’ were spotted at his new residence on the Sandringham estate today, despite losing this title due to the Epstein scandal.
Numerous boxes made their way to Marsh Farm, a five-bedroom house in Norfolk, with labels such as ‘HRH office’, ‘HRH sitting room’, and ‘HRH meeting room’. This suggests that the former duke still privately embraces the honorific.
The items, transported by the royal-approved company Gander & White, included clothing, antiques, and books—some noted as fragile—as the disgraced royal completes his compulsory move.
Among the belongings was a copy of Colin Pillinger’s My Life on Mars, which recounts the unsuccessful Beagle 2 mission.
The delivery arrived via two large vans on Friday morning, following an earlier arrival of four lorries in the week as workers hurried to finalize renovations at the hidden property.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is currently residing at Wood Farm nearby, staying out of the public eye since his arrest on February 19.
He is currently hiding at nearby Wood Farm after his arrest last month over the Epstein files and claims of misconduct in public office when he was a UK trade envoy.
Disgraced Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is still clinging to his royal styling – with removal boxes stamped ‘HRH’ delivered to his new home on the Sandringham estate
Hundreds of boxes arrived at five-bedroom Marsh Farm in Norfolk – many clearly labelled ‘HRH office’
Among the items spotted was a copy of My Life on Mars by Colin Pillinger, detailing the ill-fated Beagle 2 mission
The move to Marsh Farm follows his eviction from Royal Lodge in Windsor by his brother, Charles, with the Norfolk bolthole hastily upgraded in recent days.
Security fencing, CCTV, broadband and Sky TV have all been installed, alongside new flooring, carpets and extensive decorating, with further work carried out on the grounds.
Gander & White, which has the slogan ‘custodians of the irreplaceable,’ specialises in transporting fine art and counts the National Portrait Gallery among its prestigious clients.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor faces explosive allegations that he shared sensitive information with paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein during his time as special representative for international trade and investment.
He is now effectively confined indoors under orders from the King, with sources claiming his daily routine has shrunk to little more than tea and Abernethy biscuits each morning.
Until the tumultuous events of the past few weeks days, Andrew, 66, was alleged to have been contemplating fleeing to either Bahrain or Abu Dhabi where he could still expect the warmest of welcomes and enjoy hugely lucrative financial connections.
He is now effectively confined indoors under orders from the King, with sources claiming his daily routine has shrunk to little more than tea and Abernethy biscuits each morning
The removal lorries from Gander & White, which has a Royal Warrant, arrived at five-bedroom property on the Sandringham estate earlier this week
Marsh Farm is now surrounded by new fences and other security such as CCTV ahead of Andrew’s move
And the Daily Mail was told exclusively by a royal source that his early morning arrest last month came following an urgent tip-off to a senior courtier that ‘Andrew was getting his passport ready for a midnight flit’ and might be about to hoof it to the Middle East on a private jet, most likely to Bahrain which does not have a formal extradition treaty with the UK.
But with bombs and missiles falling across the region daily, any lingering hopes of reinventing himself among the Arab elite appear to have gone up in multiple puffs of smoke.
The US-Israel war against Iran also looks set to affect the movements of his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson and their daughters, Beatrice, 37, and Eugenie, 35, who have all built connections in the region.
‘This is a huge blow to all of them,’ a close family friend told the Daily Mail. ‘There is no way any of them are going to go to the Gulf and Middle East region for a long time to come. It is far too dangerous for them, just as it is for everybody else.’