Mounting transatlantic pressure is building around Prince Andrew as U.S. congressional figures and the family of his primary accuser, Virginia Giuffre, demand his testimony regarding his connections to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Democratic Congressman Ro Khanna has openly criticized the British Royal Family for lacking transparency, while Congresswoman Teresa Leger Fernandez has called upon King Charles III to explicitly direct his brother to cooperate with American investigators.
This development follows King Charles’s first public statement on the matter, conveyed through a Buckingham Palace spokesperson, expressing his ‘profound concern’ over the allegations and affirming the family’s readiness to support police inquiries. The statement also extended the King and Queen’s ‘thoughts and sympathies’ to all victims of abuse.
Simultaneously, Thames Valley Police confirmed it is assessing a formal complaint from the anti-monarchy organization Republic. The allegation centers on Prince Andrew’s purported sharing of confidential information acquired during his tenure as a UK trade envoy with Jeffrey Epstein between 2010 and 2011, a claim supported by documents in the recent Epstein file release.
The political pressure from the U.S. is multifaceted. Congressman Khanna, a key sponsor of the legislation that mandated the release of the Epstein documents, argued that the Royal Family must ‘come clean,’ provide full disclosure of their knowledge, and consider financial compensation for the survivors. He characterized the current situation as potentially the monarchy’s ‘most vulnerable’ moment, asserting that merely stripping Andrew of his titles is an insufficient response.
Echoing this sentiment, Congresswoman Fernandez, a member of the House Oversight Committee, emphasized that jurisdictional status should not shield Andrew from accountability. She urged for a comprehensive inquiry in both the U.S. and England to identify all individuals present during the alleged incidents.
Adding a personal dimension to the legal and political demands, Sky Roberts, the brother of Virginia Giuffre, publicly insisted that Andrew should testify before the U.S. Congress. This aligns with revelations from the latest Department of Justice document dump, which details numerous failed attempts by U.S. authorities to secure Andrew’s cooperation. A significant legal hurdle remains: the former prince cannot be compelled by a U.S. subpoena to travel and testify, a point of considerable frustration for investigators. Despite a previous deadline set by Congressional Democrats last autumn, Andrew has remained unresponsive.
