In the latest tranche of Jeffrey Epstein documents released by the Justice Department on December 23, 2025, compelling evidence has emerged that lends significant weight to Virginia Giuffre’s longstanding allegations against Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the former Prince Andrew. Giuffre, who tragically died by suicide in April 2025, claimed she was trafficked by Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell to have sex with Andrew on three occasions when she was 17. Andrew has always vehemently denied the allegations, settling a 2022 civil lawsuit without admitting liability.

The third batch—nearly 30,000 pages—includes a 2020 Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) request from U.S. prosecutors to British authorities. The document reveals investigators had gathered “evidence that Prince Andrew engaged in sexual conduct involving one of Epstein’s victims,” along with proof he was “present” during certain victim interactions with Epstein and Maxwell. It also states Andrew had “documentary” knowledge that Maxwell recruited females for sex acts with Epstein and others. Prosecutors sought a compelled interview, noting Andrew was not then a target under U.S. law.
Additional emails from 2001-2002, apparently between Maxwell and an alias “The Invisible Man” signed “A”—strongly linked to Andrew—show him asking for “new inappropriate friends” while at Balmoral and inquiring about “fun” girls for a Peru trip. Maxwell responded apologetically, saying she could only find “appropriate” ones.
These revelations transform Giuffre’s contested claims into corroborated investigative findings, intensifying scrutiny on Andrew, who was stripped of royal titles in October 2025. Victims’ advocates hail the files as validation for survivors, though heavy redactions and delays continue to spark demands for full transparency.
As the Epstein saga persists, this evidence underscores Giuffre’s bravery in exposing elite complicity, ensuring her voice echoes powerfully even posthumously.
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