A stunned Britain froze as royal biographer Andrew Lownie delivered a chilling warning on December 22, 2025: “It’s going to get worse” for Prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, with yet more damaging allegations emerging from unsealed Epstein files.

Lownie, author of Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, spoke on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, voice grave amid the final Epstein Files Transparency Act disclosures (completed December 19). “Andrew’s exile—titles revoked October 30, Royal Lodge eviction January 2026—isn’t the end,” he said. “Files confirm deeper ties: post-conviction dinners, Maxwell’s royal access, financial trails. More allegations—unredacted survivor claims, witness accounts—will surface. It’s going to get worse.”
The warning amplified Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025), naming Andrew 88 times for alleged assaults at age 17, describing him as “entitled,” believing sex with her was his “birthright.” Giuffre’s suicide April 25 at 41 left her truth unyielding; Lownie called it “the catalyst.”
Public sentiment—79% demanding accountability per YouGov—reflected exhaustion. Palace sources whispered “dread”; Charles reportedly viewed emerging details as “toxic.” As Christmas loomed, Lownie’s chilling prediction—raw, unflinching—ensured Andrew’s scandal, once contained, now loomed larger: allegations mounting, reckoning unrelenting.
Giuffre’s legacy—her fight against Epstein’s network—thunders on: worse coming, silence impossible.
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