A stunned Britain woke to royal biographer Andrew Lownie’s chilling revelations in his August 2025 book Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, painting Prince Andrew’s ties to Jeffrey Epstein as deeper and more compromising than ever imagined.

Lownie, drawing from over 300 interviews and newly accessed documents, exposed Andrew’s Epstein relationship as far more extensive than admitted: hosting Epstein and Maxwell at Royal Lodge in 2006 (post-arrest warrant), a 2011 email contradicting Andrew’s 2010 cutoff (“we are in this together”), and a 2016 plot by Epstein to hire an SAS hitman to kill Andrew and Sarah Ferguson over financial disputes, uncovered through hacked emails.
The book details Andrew’s “entitlement” as enabling Epstein’s access: charity events, Balmoral invitations, and mutual social circles with Trump and Clinton. Lownie revealed Andrew’s friendship with Trump, including Mar-a-Lago dinners and Epstein’s attempts to “remove” Trump from a “power list.” A shocking assassination plot—Epstein’s rage over unpaid loans—added darkness.
Entitled argues Andrew’s behavior made him a royal liability: “The monarchy can’t defend the indefensible.” The revelations, amplified by Giuffre’s Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025), contributed to Andrew’s title revocation October 30. Lownie warned: “More is coming—the files unseal December 19.”
The book, a bestseller, trended #EntitledRevelations with 3.2 million posts (70% demanding probes). Lownie’s chilling portrait—calm yet unflinching—underscored Andrew’s fall: ties deeper, legacy darker, royal grace forever compromised.
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