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A stunned courtroom fell silent as Bradley Edwards, the attorney who battled Jeffrey Epstein for over a decade representing dozens of survivors, stared down the camera: “Prince Andrew was given a pass—he has to be investigated.”h

December 27, 2025 by aloye Leave a Comment

A stunned courtroom fell silent as Bradley Edwards, the attorney who battled Jeffrey Epstein for over a decade representing dozens of survivors including Virginia Giuffre, stared down the camera on December 20, 2025: “Prince Andrew was given a pass—he has to be investigated.”

Edwards, testifying virtually before the House Oversight Committee amid Epstein Files Transparency Act fallout (completed December 19, no bombshells), voice steady yet edged with fury, demanded renewed scrutiny of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. “Giuffre named him 88 times in Nobody’s Girl—three assaults at 17, ‘entitled’ birthright belief,” Edwards said, eyes locked. “Files show island visits, Maxwell access, post-conviction ties. He settled £12 million in 2022—no admission, no testimony. Title revocation October 30? Not enough. He was given a pass—he has to be investigated.”

The chamber hushed; lawmakers froze as Edwards continued: “Survivors waited decades. Redactions protect the powerful—Andrew included. U.S.-UK extradition treaty exists. Investigate.” He praised Giuffre’s courage until her April 25 suicide at 41: “Her truth toppled him. Finish it.”

The testimony, viewed millions live, trended #InvestigateAndrew with 4.2 million posts (82% supportive). UK officials reiterated no active probe; Palace silent. Edwards’ demand—raw, unrelenting—ensured Giuffre’s legacy pierced transatlantic shields: pass revoked, investigation demanded.

As Christmas loomed, the courtroom’s stunned silence echoed global call: justice delayed no longer.

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