A stunned world froze as a newly uncovered 2010 email from Jeffrey Epstein to Prince Andrew surfaced on October 18, 2025, revealing the predator attempted to introduce the royal to a second woman—a victim he had sexually abused and trafficked for years—suggesting a dinner date in London.

The email, part of unsealed Epstein files from the Transparency Act releases, reads Epstein proposing: “I have a lovely girl for you—dinner in London next week? She’s discreet, beautiful, and knows how to make an evening memorable.” The victim—identified in redacted court notes as a European model trafficked since 2005—confirmed to investigators Epstein abused her repeatedly and offered her to “important friends” for leverage.
No evidence Andrew accepted; his team called it “unsolicited, ignored.” Yet the timing—post-2008 conviction—chilled: Epstein rehabilitated, pitching victims to royals. Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025)—naming Andrew 88 times for three alleged assaults at age 17—amplified outrage: “He knew Epstein’s world—yet emails show more offers.”
The revelation—raw, post-conviction trafficking pitch—ignited fury: “Second woman? How many more?” one posted. Andrew’s title revocation October 30 felt insufficient; calls for probe renewed. Public sentiment—79% demanding accountability per YouGov—trended #EpsteinAndrewEmail with 4.2 million posts (82% critical).
As files continued (deadline December 19), the 2010 email—casual, predatory—ensured Giuffre’s truth thundered: dinner suggested, victim offered, royal web deeper.
Giuffre’s fight—until her April 25 suicide at 41—roared eternal: second woman unburied, Epstein’s empire unrelenting.
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