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Andrew should be incarcerated, according to Virginia Giuffre’s brother, as the demand intensifies for a criminal investigation into the former prince’s connections with Jeffrey Epstein.
In a dramatic move last night, King Charles revoked Andrew’s title of Prince and is evicting him from the Royal Lodge, where he has resided for decades at a nominal rent.
Jonathan Dimbleby, once a biographer and close ally of the King, revealed that Charles has been repeatedly embarrassed by his brother’s actions.
On BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme, the veteran broadcaster expressed his certainty that the King has felt continual embarrassment, frustration, and anger towards Andrew’s conduct.
Today, Andrew, stripped of his titles, is now simply Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, with potential legal scrutiny looming over his past actions.
After Buckingham Palace’s extraordinary announcement last night, Sky Roberts, Virginia Giuffre’s brother, commended the King for ‘leading by example’ on the global stage, though he cautioned that the struggle against Andrew’s alleged actions is far from concluded.
He told BBC Newsnight: ‘It’s not enough – we have to have some kind of investigation that goes further into this.
‘He’s still walking around a free man. I commend the King, I think he’s doing an amazing job as a world leader setting a precedent but we need to take it one more step further – he needs to be behind bars.’
Amanda Roberts, Virginia’s sister-in-law, added: ‘I think both countries need to look at collaborating here – the US government hold the key to the larger scope of the Jeffrey Epstein case.
‘So Prince Andrew may be just one of those people that are implicated and I do believe if he’s willing to come forward now [it] will lead to the larger scope of what’s really gone on here, because there are so many people that need to be held accountable.
‘The UK is setting an example for what the US should be doing right now. And I would ask that your leaders put that pressure on our leaders to do the right thing.’
When contacted by the Daily Mail, the Metropolitan Police did not rule out a possible prosecution.
The revelation comes after a dramatic fall from grace for the former prince, as it emerged:
- Prince William was ‘seething’ by his uncle’s behaviour at the Duchess of Kent’s funeral and fully supported the King’s decision to strip Andrew of his titles.
- Princess Beatrice and Eugenie will retain their Royal titles despite their father Andrew no longer being a Prince.
- Prince Andrew could face a private prosecution over allegations of sexual assault, corruption and misconduct in public office.
- Royal biographer Andrew Lownie claimed Andrew’s friends have come forward ‘in droves’ to say they are willing to paint the ‘full picture’ about his extravagant past.
- Jonathan Dimbleby told BBC Radio 4’s Today Programme a turning point for the King was his ‘spiritual’ trip to the Vatican.
 
 Andrew’s recent humiliation after being stripped of all his titles could open the door for a police probe, royal historian and author Andrew Lownie has said
 
 Royal Lodge in Windsor Great Park, Andrew’s former home. He will now be moving to a private residence on the monarch’s Sandringham estate
Yesterday, the anti-monarchy campaign group Republic said it had instructed lawyers to investigate the prince and, if appropriate, press ahead with legal proceedings.
The Daily Mail understands the allegations it is focusing on relate to accusations he sexually assaulted Giuffre, that he asked a royal protection officer to look into her background and impropriety when he served as an official UK trade envoy.
But anti-monarchy group Republic said it is mounting its own bid to take him to court because the legal and political response to the claims has been ‘weak and inadequate’ to date.
It said it has made a ‘powerful, principled argument for justice to be done for the victims of sexual abuse, and for those who corrupt public office to be held accountable’.
‘If not us, then who?’ asked Graham Smith, the group’s CEO.
‘It’s a devastating indictment on the UK’s criminal justice system, police and politicians – not to mention the king and heir – that we must resort to a private prosecution.
‘It should be a cause for concern that so many people believe – rightly in my view – that the royals are not treated equally in law. Equality in law is a basic tenet of democracy.
‘I firmly believe there is strong enough evidence to justify a serious investigation. The authorities and politicians appear to want to look the other way, while minimising the accusations made against Andrew.
 
 The Royal Family released a public statement announcing Andrew would no longer be a prince
 
 Andrew, Virginia Giuffre and sex trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell in a photo reportedly taken in 2001, when Giuffre was 17 years old
‘The truth must prevail and justice must be seen to be done.’
Last night the group tweeted that Andrew’s punishment was ‘nowhere near enough’, adding: ‘He’s lost a bunch of pointless titles and been relocated to another mansion. Dodging any actual punishment, as always.
‘He will never be an ‘ordinary person’ – ordinary people don’t get away with being accused of sexual abuse.’
A private prosecution brought by Republic would not involve a statutory prosecutor such as Crown Prosecution Service, which brings cases on behalf of the Crown.
They are commonly brought by organisations such as the RSPCA, but can be brought by private individuals.
In some cases, a party wishing to bring a private prosecution may have to seek the consent of the Government’s top legal adviser the Attorney General, or the Director of Public Prosecutions, who is the head of the CPS.
The CPS also has the right to take on a private prosecution – and even to bring it to an end if it considers the prosecution to be brought maliciously.
This also follows Andrew’s royal biographer Andrew Lownie, whose forensic biography of the disgraced Duke of York, Entitled, was released last week, promising there will be more revelations are to come.
Lownie told The Mail on Sunday that friends of the prince have come forward ‘in droves’ to say they are now willing to paint the ‘full picture’ about his extravagant past.
Many are formerly loyal associates who had originally declined to be involved in the book but have been emboldened to come forward since its publication.
And so many have now offered to contribute that the historian – who spent four years working on Entitled, and interviewed hundreds of people for his research – has been invited by his publisher to produce an updated edition.
Speaking to the MoS, Mr Lownie said it would be an ‘entirely new book’ which would be ready by next summer.
‘The amazing and astonishing thing that’s happened since Entitled came out is that people have come forward in droves with more stories to tell about Prince Andrew,’ he said.
‘Those who felt they couldn’t speak to me before have now changed their mind or have realised they’ve been covering things up for him out of misplaced loyalty.
‘A lot of respectable people who declined to be involved in the book are now coming forward, keen to unload the secrets they’ve been keeping for all these years.’
Yesterday in a bombshell statement, Buckingham Palace confirmed the 65-year-old would no longer be a Prince – with immediate effect – and would also be leaving the 30-bed Royal Lodge nestled on the grounds of Windsor Castle.
The Palace said the ‘censures [were] deemed necessary’ amid the ongoing Jeffrey Epstein scandal – the paedophile financer who Andrew lied about cutting ties with.
It comes after the Mail on Sunday exclusively revealed scandalous correspondence where the shunned prince told Epstein ‘we are in this together’ a day after the infamous picture of the royal with his alleged then-teenage sex victim Virginia Giuffre was released.
As Andrew’s links to the disgraced financier continued to bring shame on the royals, last night he finally agreed to surrender his Windsor lease where he resided with his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson for over two decades, paying ‘peppercorn rent’.
And in a brutal remark sources revealed the former Duchess of York, who has also been embroiled in scandal relating to sex-offender Epstein, ‘will make her own arrangements’ when it comes to her future.
It is understood the King is in the process of sending royal warrants to the Lord Chancellor to remove his brother’s titles and honours, to which Andrew has not objected.
His Majesty’s younger brother will now be banished to a private property on the monarch’s Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, but no further details have been shared. It is understood Prince William and the Royal Family fully support the King’s decision.
Annie Farmer, one of Jeffrey Epstein’s earliest accusers who testified in the trial that resulted in the conviction of his long-time aide Ghislaine Maxwell, told the BBC: ‘Virginia did what most thought impossible. She showed the world that even the most powerful predators can be held accountable.’
Meanwhile Andrew’s daughters Princess Beatrice, 37, and Princess Eugenie, 35, will retain their titles as Her Royal Highnesses with it previously reported that Charles was was very keen to ‘protect’ his nieces.
However, royal historian and author Andrew Lownie believes the recent fallout doesn’t mark ‘the end’ of controversy for the shunned royal, now formally known as Mr Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
‘I don’t think it’s the end of it. I think there are many more disclosures to come, but at least they’re taking some decisive action. So, I don’t think it’s all over for him,’ he told The Mirror.
When queried if he believed a police probe into Andrew was more likely following yesterday’s announcement, he remarked that the ex-duke was being ‘throw[n] under the bus’.
‘Yes, I’ve been saying for some time they’re [the Royal family] going to throw Andrew under the bus to save themselves and this is the first indication of that,’ he added.
‘This should have been done years ago. I think it’s been Virginia Giuffre’s book that kind of made the Palace realise that there is a big problem here.’
Last week, the row over the Royal Lodge continued to grow amid damning revelations in a posthumous memoir from Andrew’s sex abuse accuser Giuffre, who took her own life this year, aged 41.
Ms Giuffre’s explosive book Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice was released in this month, with the manuscript having been completed before she died.
Inside, she detailed her years spent as a sex slave to Epstein and his British madam Ghislaine Maxwell, amid claims she had been trafficked to the ex-duke three times, and whom she called ‘entitled’ and viewed sex as his ‘birthright’.
Within the 400-page autobiography, she also alleged the ex-duke said ‘thank you’ in a ‘clipped British accent’ after their alleged first encounter when she was 17.
 
 Security stand at the gates of the Royal Lodge following yesterday’s announcement
 
 Andrew pictured with Jeffrey Epstein in New York’s Central Park in 2011
 
 Anti monarchy group Republic said yesterday it intends to investigate allegations that the former Duke of York sexually assaulted Giuffre (pictured)
 
 It is understood Sarah Ferguson, seen with Andrew at Royal Ascot in 2019, will make her own living arrangements
She also recalled how Maxwell praised her following the encounter, saying, ‘You did well, the prince had fun’.
Andrew denied ever meeting Ms Giuffre. In 2022, he settled a US civil case she lodged for a reported £12million, reportedly receiving money from his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, to help meet the costs.
The settlement came with no admission of liability.
Yesterday, Ms Guiffre’s family spoke out after it was announced Andrew would lose his titles, proudly stating how ‘an ordinary American girl from an ordinary American family, brought down a British prince with her truth and extraordinary courage.’
‘Virginia Roberts Giuffre, our sister, a child when she was sexually assaulted by Andrew, never stopped fighting for accountability for what had happened to her and to countless other survivors like her.
‘Today, she declares victory.
‘We, her family, along with her survivor sisters, continue Virginia’s battle and will not rest until the same accountability applies to all of the abusers and abettors connected to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.’
In the wake of the Giuffre scandal, Andrew is facing a private prosecution over allegations of sexual assault, corruption and misconduct in public office.
 
 The move was said to have been entirely down to the King and his advisers, without pressure from the government. The monarch is pictured in Australia earlier this month
 
 Amid the controversy, His Majesty, King Charles III, was very keen to ‘protect’ Andrew’s daughters, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, who remain Her Royal Highnesses
 
 Andrew stands next to Prince William and his wife Catherine, Princess of Wales, as they leave Westminster Cathedral at the Duchess of Kent’s funeral
 
 Andrew and his ex-wife Sarah (pictured) are now understood to be moving out of the Royal Lodge
York Central MP Rachael Maskell said the monarchy needed to become more ‘accountable’ in the wake of the King’s decision to strip Andrew Mountbatten Windsor of his titles.
Ms Maskell told the BBC’s Today programme: ‘I think the world’s moved on, and we need the monarchy to be accountable by all means, not least to the public.
‘When we saw 80 per cent of the public saying remove those titles, I’m sure there is relief across the country now that that has been done.’
Ms Maskell, who introduced a Bill in the Commons to make it easier for the King to remove peerages, suggested there was still a need to change the law.
She said: ‘We know that peers, for instance, have ended up in jail, so I think we need to look at the whole system.
‘And my Bill would have enabled people with all forms of peerages, baronets and dukes and princes and princesses, to have those titles removed, a mechanism which could be carried forward, not for just one circumstance, but all circumstances.’
It is understood earlier this month the Metropolitan Police was ‘actively’ looking into the claims Andrew had asked his personal protection officer to investigate Ms Giuffre, and that he was interviewed by detectives at home last week.
 
 Andrew is seen on the Windsor Estate on September 27 this year
 
 Members of anti monarchy group Republic stood outside Andrew’s home – the Royal Lodge at Great Windsor Park last week to demand greater transparency
 
  
  
  
 Email exchanges Between Prince Andrew, Ed Perkins and Jeffrey Epstein
A bombshell email published by the Mail on Sunday earlier this month also revealed how Andrew asked his taxpayer–funded protection officer to dig into her past, two months after the infamous photo of him with Giuffre and Maxwell came to light.
In an extraordinary message to Ed Perkins, Queen Elizabeth’s deputy press secretary, he wrote: ‘It would also seem she has a criminal record in the States. I have given her DoB [date of birth] and social security number for investigation with XXX, the on duty ppo [personal protection officer].’
It comes as e-mails from Andrew to Epstein emerged, where the former duke said he was ‘concerned’ about the impact this newspaper’s revelations would have on his friend after the infamous picture of the royal with Ms Giuffre was released.
He reassured the vile billionaire they would ‘rise above’ press scrutiny.
The correspondence was sent to Epstein 12 weeks after Andrew had supposedly ceased all contact with the convicted sex offender.
The leaked email provides definitive proof the Prince lied in his car-crash interview with BBC’s Newsnight when he claimed he ‘never had any contact’ with the disgraced financier after the pair were famously pictured walking together in New York’s Central Park in December 2010.
Democratic Congressman Suhas Subramanyam, who has previously called for Prince Andrew to testify before a US Congressional committee about his links to Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell to ‘clear his name’, last night again urged Andrew to give evidence.
In a statement, he said: ‘It’s clear that Prince Andrew has information about Epstein’s crimes and he must do more than just give up titles or hide from the public spotlight.
‘He owes it to the victims to share everything he knows about Epstein’s criminal operation and come before the Oversight Committee.
‘Regardless, we will continue to pursue the files and all the evidence, no matter how rich and powerful the perpetrators involved.’
Amy Wallace, co-author of Virginia Roberts Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl, last night told BBC Newsnight: ‘History has just been made by Virginia Roberts-Giuffre.’
‘I’m so proud of her. I just wish that she was here to see this historic moment. History has just been made by Virginia Roberts-Giuffre,’ she said.
‘Rich people have been allowed to treat poor people as their playthings and not pay any consequences for it. And apparently that time is over and I am so grateful to the King and I gather to others in Buckingham Palace who agree.
‘In the United States, that reckoning has not begun, but I hope that the Department of Justice and the FBI will do its job and start to hold some of these men to account on this side of the pond.
‘I’m sure it was difficult for him. The former prince is his brother, but it’s gone on long enough. And the women are to be believed,’ Wallace added.
In another world exclusive the Mail on Sunday also exposed a bombshell email revealing how Andrew’s ex-wife Fergie cynically lied when she publicly disowned the vile billionaire.
It was just weeks after her public statement that she wrote him a gushing private message, describing disgraced Epstein as a ‘steadfast, generous and supreme friend’ – confessing she only distanced herself from him to save her own reputation.
Now, the former Duchess of York will now be known as plain Sarah Ferguson.
 
 Andrew attends a military air display event on November 25, 2010 with Abu Dhabi’s ruler Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan
 
  
 The bombshell emails sent by Fergie to Jeffrey Epstein – despite vowing just weeks before to never contact him again during a newspaper interview
Following the revelation, Sarah was dropped by seven charities after ‘humbly apologising’ to Epstein after disavowing him amid his conviction for child sexual abuse offences.
The bombshell leaked email shows Sarah wrote to the convicted sex offender to ‘humbly apologise’ in 2011 just weeks after telling the press she had cut all ties with him.
In an earlier interview that year, she described her involvement with Epstein, who had served time for soliciting prostitution from a minor, as a ‘gigantic error of judgment’.
The organisations who have since cut ties with the duchess include the Teenage Cancer Trust, which she had backed since 1990, the British Heart Foundation, children’s hospice charity Julia’s House and Prevent Breast Cancer.
A spokesman for Sarah previously said the email was sent to counter an aggressive threat Epstein had made to sue her for defamation.
The series of scandalous emails piled on the pressure for the Royal Family to severe ties with the ex-Yorks, with internal talks beginning after Prince William was left ‘seething’ by his uncle’s behaviour at the Duchess of Kent’s funeral last month
Andrew was pictured sidling up to the Prince and Princess of Wales, which the heir to the throne saw as him being distracted from the ceremony.
No 10 has also reportedly been pressuring the royals to deal with the scandal, which has run on for years and saw Andrew step back from public life in 2019.
The intervention from Downing Street came after the former prince was entangled in the ongoing Chinese spying row.
And only further embarrassment descended after it was revealed Andrew met with the ‘spymaster’ at the heart of the collapsed China spy case at least three times.
The under-fire royal, already mired in controversy over his friendship with another alleged Beijing spy, forged links with Chinese Communist Party (CCP) mandarin Cai Qi, with the pair posing as they celebrated ‘jointly building a golden era in China-UK relations’.
Prosecutors now believe Cai was presiding over a massive intelligence-gathering operation to steal British secrets, overseeing the alleged activities of parliamentary researcher Christopher Cash and China-based English teacher Christopher Berry.
Both men have denied any wrongdoing and the case against them collapsed on the eve of trial last month after the Government refused to label China an ‘enemy’.
After Andrew and his ex-wife agreed to relinquish their titles, with Buckingham Palace releasing a statement on the Prince’s behalf.
It marked the first time, the palace had spoken for him since his car crash Newsnight interview in 2019.
 
 Andrew alongside his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson at the funeral of the Duchess of Kent on September 16, 2025
 
 Sarah Ferguson attends the traditional Easter Sunday Mattins Service at St George’s Chapel on Easter Sunday earlier this year. Epstein claimed he bankrolled Fergie for 15 years
The statement read: ‘In discussion with The King, and my immediate and wider family, we have concluded the continued accusations about me distract from the work of His Majesty and the Royal Family.
‘I have decided, as I always have, to put my duty to my family and country first. I stand by my decision five years ago to stand back from public life.
‘With His Majesty’s agreement, we feel I must now go a step further.
‘I will therefore no longer use my title or the honours which have been conferred upon me. As I have said previously, I vigorously deny the accusations against me.’
Yesterday, politicians form across the aisle supported King Charles’ decision to strip Andrew of all of his titles and Royal Lodge residence.
Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said His Majesty is ‘absolutely right’ to do so, while Tory leader Kemi Badenoch remarked how the decision must have been ‘very difficult’ for the King.
‘It’s clear that Andrew’s position had become totally untenable, having disgraced his office and embarrassed the country,’ Sir Davey said.
‘This is an important step towards rebuilding trust in our institutions and drawing a line under this whole sorry saga.’
The Lib Democrats had urged the Government to make time for a debate on Andrew’s Royal Lodge lease in Parliament.
Meanwhile Ms Badenoch said it must have been ‘very difficult’ for the King to take the steps against his sibling.
However, she maintained it was right for the public not to tolerate sexual abuse allegations.
 
 Andrew is set to leave his home at Royal Lodge (pictured) with his ex–wife, the former Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson is said to be responsible for making her own arrangements
Speaking on an LBC Radio phone-in, she said: ‘I’ve been following this story more about a family. It’s a very sad state of affairs.
‘I think that the King has clearly felt that this is the right decision for the royal family. It must have been a very difficult thing for him to have done. I mean, having to do that to your own brother.
‘But the standards and expectations in society now are very high. People expect to see the very highest levels of integrity.
‘And I’m afraid the whole Jeffrey Epstein saga and everyone it has touched, from Prince Andrew to Peter Mandelson, has just shown that the public has no truck whatsoever with any kind of sexual abuse, sexual offences, especially of minors. And I think that that’s quite right.’
The leader of the Scottish National Party in Westminster, Stephen Flynn, said on BBC Newsnight last night: ‘He is no longer Prince Andrew […] He is just but one of us.’
Flynn said: ‘If I may first just pay testament to the bravery and the courage of Virginia Giuffre and her family and friends, some of whom we’ve heard from tonight, this is their moment and they very much deserve it.
‘It’s vindication for them, it’s also vindication for the media, who have doggedly gone after this story for… Year after year.
‘It’s a vindication for the public who have been outraged and angered by this for years.
‘It’s vindication of the parliamentarians who just in recent weeks have ignored the diktat from government, the attempted diktats that this is not something that should be discussed within the parliamentary domain.
‘He is no longer Prince Andrew. He is Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. He is just but one of us.’
The SNP had put forward a motion to create a new law to formally strip Andrew of his dukedom.
 
					 
							 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
					 
						 
						 
						