In a London courtroom in 2021, Prince Andrew’s lawyers stood tall, arguing with cold confidence that Virginia Giuffre’s explosive lawsuit against him should be thrown out entirely—because of a secret 2009 non-prosecution agreement she signed with Jeffrey Epstein that, they claimed, released not only Epstein but every “potential defendant” he ever associated with, including royalty.
For a terrifying moment, it looked like the prince might walk free without ever facing trial. The broad, hidden clause in that $500,000 settlement—crafted in shadows and signed under duress—nearly erased Giuffre’s chance at justice, leaving her allegations buried and her voice silenced once more after years of isolation.
How close did Andrew come to total victory, and what dramatic twist finally kept the case alive?

In a London courtroom in 2021—though the proceedings unfolded in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York—Prince Andrew’s lawyers stood tall, arguing with cold confidence that Virginia Giuffre’s explosive civil lawsuit against him should be thrown out entirely. Filed on August 9, 2021, the suit accused Andrew of sexually assaulting Giuffre three times in 2001–2002 (in London, New York, and on Epstein’s Little St. James island) after she was trafficked to him by Jeffrey Epstein when she was 17.
The defense’s key weapon: a secret 2009 non-prosecution settlement Giuffre signed with Epstein for $500,000 plus other consideration. The broad release clause discharged Epstein and “any other person or entity who could have been included as a potential defendant” from future claims related to her allegations. Andrew’s team insisted he qualified as a “potential defendant”—as royalty, one of the categories Giuffre had referenced in earlier filings—shielding him as a third-party beneficiary.
For a terrifying moment, it looked like the prince might walk free without ever facing trial. The clause, crafted in shadows and signed under duress amid Epstein’s protective 2008 deal, nearly erased Giuffre’s chance at justice after years of isolation, public accusations, and solitary advocacy. If upheld at the motion-to-dismiss stage, the case would end before discovery, depositions, or a jury could scrutinize the infamous 2001 photograph of Andrew with his arm around Giuffre’s waist, Maxwell smiling behind.
The dramatic twist came on January 12, 2022, when U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan rejected Andrew’s motion to dismiss in a 44-page ruling. Kaplan deemed the 2009 settlement “far from a model of clear and precise drafting,” criticizing the ambiguous term “potential.” He noted only Epstein could clarify its intent, and Andrew was unnamed, lacked knowledge of the deal, was not subject to Florida jurisdiction, and the original claims involved inapplicable federal issues. Ambiguities, Kaplan ruled, must be resolved by a jury—not at dismissal. He also rejected arguments that Giuffre’s allegations lacked specificity, allowing the case to proceed.
This denial kept the lawsuit alive, shifting momentum. Discovery loomed, with depositions scheduled (Andrew’s set for March 10, 2022, in London). Facing potential trial between September and December 2022, intense scrutiny, and reputational damage—compounded by Ghislaine Maxwell’s December 2021 conviction—Andrew pivoted. On February 15, 2022, the parties announced a settlement in principle: an undisclosed sum to Giuffre, a substantial donation to her charity SOAR (Speak Out, Act, Reclaim), and no admission of liability. Andrew expressed regret for his Epstein association and commended survivors’ bravery. The case was dismissed by stipulation in March 2022.
Andrew came perilously close to total victory—his motion could have buried the claims forever. Yet Judge Kaplan’s sharp scrutiny of the clause’s vagueness cracked it open, forcing accountability through settlement rather than trial. Giuffre’s persistence transformed a hidden shield into a catalyst for reckoning.
Leave a Reply