A sealed letter arrived at Royal Lodge on November 20, 2025, at 2:17 PM, disrupting the tenuous solitude of Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, formerly Prince Andrew. Signed by sixteen Democratic members of the U.S. House Oversight Committee, led by Representative Robert Garcia of California, the letter formally requested his cooperation in a transcribed interview regarding his ties to Jeffrey Epstein. This development, part of an ongoing investigation into Epstein’s sex trafficking operations, intensified scrutiny on Andrew’s past, particularly following the October 2025 release of Virginia Giuffre’s memoir, Nobody’s Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice.

The memoir, published posthumously after Giuffre’s suicide in April 2025, reiterated allegations that Andrew sexually abused her three times as a teenager—at Ghislaine Maxwell’s London home, Epstein’s New York townhouse, and on Epstein’s private island, Little Saint James. The letter referenced these claims, flight logs documenting Andrew’s travel on Epstein’s plane between 1999 and 2006, and a 2011 email where Andrew wrote to Epstein, “we are in this together,” contradicting his claim of ceasing contact in 2010. Financial records noting “massage for Andrew” further fueled suspicions.
Delivered days after King Charles III stripped Andrew of his royal titles and evicted him from Royal Lodge on October 30, 2025, the letter underscored his diminished status. Now residing at Sandringham, Andrew faces no legal obligation to comply, as the committee lacks subpoena power over foreign nationals. Nonetheless, the request, demanding a response by November 20, amplifies pressure for accountability. Giuffre’s family hailed the memoir’s impact, noting it “brought down a prince.” As Congress seeks to unmask Epstein’s enablers, Andrew’s response—or silence—will shape his legacy amid a firestorm of public and legal reckoning.
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