For years, the world clung to Prince Andrew’s vehement denials of any wrongdoing with Jeffrey Epstein—even as victims’ stories piled up and a infamous photo captured him with his arm around a teenage Virginia Giuffre. Now, in a stinging rebuke amid fresh Epstein file releases, survivor Marina Lacerda demands the former royal finally face U.S. questioning, declaring justice has been delayed far too long for the powerful. Echoing her fury, Giuffre’s longtime lawyer Brad Edwards brands anyone who ever believed Andrew’s claims “deeply ashamed,” insisting public trust in those denials was tragically misplaced. As haunting questions resurface about why royalty and wealth shielded him while survivors suffered in silence, the stark contrast between enduring victim pain and elite impunity burns brighter than ever.
Why did so many swallow his story—and will he ever answer for it?

For years, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the former Prince Andrew, vehemently denied any wrongdoing in his association with Jeffrey Epstein, insisting he had no recollection of meeting Virginia Giuffre and dismissing allegations of sexual abuse as baseless. The infamous 2001 photograph—showing him with his arm around the then-17-year-old Giuffre, alongside Ghislaine Maxwell—was explained away as possibly doctored or misinterpreted. His disastrous 2019 BBC interview, where he cited an inability to sweat and a Pizza Express alibi, paradoxically bolstered belief among some supporters who viewed his awkwardness as proof of innocence rather than evasion. Royal loyalty, media deference to the monarchy, and a lack of concrete criminal charges allowed his narrative to persist, shielding him behind privilege and institutional protection.
Yet, the latest Epstein file releases in December 2025 have shattered that facade. Emails from 2001-2002, apparently between Mountbatten-Windsor (signing as “A” or “The Invisible Man”) and Maxwell, reveal him inquiring about “new inappropriate friends” while she offered to arrange “friendly, discreet and fun” young women from good families—coinciding with his official trips. U.S. prosecutors in 2020 sought a compelled interview, citing evidence he engaged in sexual conduct with an Epstein victim, witnessed interactions, and knew about Maxwell’s recruitment. Though not a criminal target, these documents expose a deeper entanglement than he admitted.
Epstein survivor Marina Lacerda, abused from age 14, has renewed calls for Mountbatten-Windsor to be “brought to justice” in the U.S., demanding he answer authorities’ questions. Giuffre’s longtime lawyer, Brad Edwards, echoed this fury: “Anyone who ever gave any credence to the denials of Virginia’s claims by Epstein, Maxwell, or Andrew should be ashamed of themselves.” Giuffre, who settled a civil suit with him in 2022 without admission of liability and tragically died by suicide in April 2025, detailed her allegations in her posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl.
The disparity is stark: victims endure lifelong trauma, while elite figures like Mountbatten-Windsor—stripped of titles and forced from Royal Lodge in October 2025—maintain silence and relative impunity. Public and congressional pressure mounts, with U.S. lawmakers inviting him for interviews he has declined. British police have reviewed related claims, but no charges emerge.
Why did so many swallow his story? Deference to royalty, skepticism toward accusers in high-profile cases, and the absence of criminal prosecution created doubt. But mounting evidence—from photos at royal estates to prosecutorial records—erodes that trust. Will he ever submit to a U.S. deposition? Protected by distance, sovereignty, and no active criminal jeopardy, he has resisted. Yet survivors’ voices and ongoing releases suggest the Epstein scandal’s shadows linger, demanding confrontation. Justice delayed for victims cannot mean justice denied forever—accountability for the powerful remains the unresolved question.
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