1. The Pervert Prince, Epstein and Prince Andrew.
According to ‘Entitled’, the latest book by Andrew Lownie, Jeffrey Epstein was stunned by what he learned about Prince Andrew’s sexual perversity. Lownie records Epstein’s remark that:
‘From the reports I’ve got back from the women we’ve shared, he’s the most perverted animal in the bedroom. He likes to engage in stuff that’s even kinky to me – and I’m the king of kink!’

‘ .. Epstein’s long-time housekeeper Debra Gale, who worked on the island and in Florida, called the duke a ‘mainstay’ at the Palm Beach house: “I once found sex toys on the floor of his room and women’s panties in the bed.” She said Andrew also kept newly- wrapped women’s pantyhose, lingerie and sandals of several sizes in his closet at Epstein’s home.”
Since Epstein had recording devices in every room in his New York townhouse – including the toilets – to record his so-called ‘friends’, one shudders to think of the type of recordings which feature Prince Andrew. There were cameras at his other properties too. 350 gigs of video are now in the possession of the FBI and the American Department of Justice.
Virginia Roberts provided a description of the type of things that happened – and may have been recorded:
‘The third time I had sex with [Prince Andrew] was in an orgy on Epstein’s private island. I was around 18 at the time. Epstein, Andy, approximately eight other young girls, and I had sex together. The other girls all appeared to be under 18 and didn’t really speak English. …. We were told to start kissing and touching and to use sex toys on each other. Jeffrey and the prince were laughing… and then they undressed and then I performed a sex act on them – Jeffrey first and then Andrew. It was disgusting.’
And who got the recordings before the FBI swooped? Lownie states that:
‘According to mentor Steven Hoffenberg, Epstein would boast that Andrew was his “Super Bowl trophy” and he planned to sell Andrew’s secrets to Israel’s intelligence agency Mossad.‘

2.‘He had no boundaries.‘
Lownie also reveals that:
‘One 20-year-old model realised how sex-obsessed he was after meeting him at a charity function in the late 1980s and sleeping with him twice at a hotel before being whisked off to the Caribbean island of Mustique.
‘He wanted me to engage in kinky sexual activity,’ she remembers.
‘He had no boundaries.’

One of his nannies left because he made unwelcome advances.
‘When I started,’ an employee remembered, ‘I was warned to stay away from him. He would sometimes enter the staff quarters. It seemed everyone was aware of his behaviour, but little was done about it.’
Another revelation is that:
‘According to Emma Gruenbaum, a masseuse at the Wentworth Golf Club that Andrew frequented, he often booked her for massages at Royal Lodge, his home in Windsor Park but “it always felt a bit sleazy. It was clear he wanted more”.
Andrew insisted on being naked and, despite her objections, the massage taking place in his bedroom. He would try to hug her and ask about her sex life. On one occasion, while she adjusted the massage table, he remarked, ‘Hey, nice ar**e. Do you take it up the a**e?’
At a society event in 1992 he unzipped broadcaster Tania Bryer’s evening dress the full length of her back.

3. A sex pest, bully and a boor.
At one dinner party he sniffed the pâté served as a first course and turned to his right. ‘This pâté smells. What do you think?’ His female companion leaned forward to smell it and he promptly pushed her face into the dish.
One friend of his admitted: ‘He’s a nightmare to sit next to at dinner. He makes ghastly jokes about whether you’re wearing knickers. And you can’t tell him to sod off.’ They added that his jokes were so ‘lavatorially disgusting everyone was aghast’.
4. Why can’t he be told to ‘sod off’?
Andrew Lownie’s book allows us put the British nation – or at least those in Britain who are not appalled by this behaviour – on the psychiatrist’s couch. What is it about the servile character of the average Brit that would lead him or her to say, ‘And you can’t tell him to sod off”?
What is it about the British people that they would let anyone behave in the following manner?:
‘If he walked into a room and people didn’t acknowledge his presence, he’s been known to clear his throat, say, “Let’s try that again” leave the room and come back to make sure everybody stands, bows and curtseys.‘
The Prince Andrew revealed in this book is – to put it mildly – loathsome:
‘He could be unbelievably cruel. In 2005 after a heavy storm at Hillsborough Castle, Andrew asked the head of the household, David Anderson, if there was any damage. “Yes, sir,” responded Anderson. “The tree which was planted by the Queen Mother.” This was followed by a withering silence, then Andrew said in a mocking voice, “Did you mean Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother?”
‘He then asked the poor man how long he had worked for the Royal Family. Anderson replied, “I joined in 1984, sir.” “And you still don’t know the proper way to refer to my grandmother? You f***ing imbecile. Get out.’“
And what about this?
‘”Apparently his bedtime habits as a single man left a lot to be desired,” [Wendy Berry, a housekeeper at Highgrove] said. “A collection of scrunched-up, soiled tissues usually lay scattered around the bed each morning for staff to collect after they had made his bed.’“
5. The stamp of a thief.
From an early age, Prince Andrew felt entitled to thieve from others:
‘Andrew has always felt the rules did not apply to him, starting at Heatherdown, his prep school, when a box of exotic stamps went missing. After a search they were found in his desk. According to one of his classmates: “He had crossed out the name of the owner and put his own name on it. When discovered, he simply shrugged it off.”’
6. Above the law: a licence to commit crime.
As an adult, he engaged in far more serious crimes, as the Virginia Giuffre (née Roberts) statutory rape case proves. However, being a member of the Royal Family in a servile state, the Metropolitan Police did not even question him about allegations of statutory rape. He paid his victim £12 million in damages – claiming preposterously – that he had never met her. Still, he wasn’t questioned.

In October 2025 it emerged that Prince Andrew had instructed the Metropolitian Police to investigate Virginia Giuffre. An email obtained by The Mail on Sunday exposes how he instructed asked his bodyguard, an officer of the SO14 Royalty Protection Group of the Met, to investigate her. He passed her date of birth and confidential social security number to the officer.
Where did he get these details?
According to The Mail:
‘Astonishingly, Andrew then told Ed Perkins, Queen Elizabeth’s deputy press secretary, that he had asked one of his personal protection officers – part of the Met’s elite SO14 Royalty Protection Group – to dig up information about Ms Giuffre.
‘He emailed Mr Perkins hours before this newspaper first published the infamous picture of the duke with 17-year-old Ms Giuffre, which would ultimately bring about his downfall.’
‘”It would also seem she has a criminal record in the [United] States,”he wrote. “I have given her DoB [date of birth] and social security number for investigation with XXX, the on duty ppo [personal protection officer]“.’
This was a lie. She did not have a criminal record.
Prince Andrew could potentially face a criminal investigation in the US for sharing a social security number without permission.
On 28 October 2025, a spokesperson for the Met Police stated: ‘We are aware of media reporting and are actively looking into the claims made.’

7. He was let off on the grounds: ‘I’m in a hurry’.
There have been other clashes with tbe law :
‘In 2002 he was stopped by police for speeding at 60 miles an hour in a 40mph area, rushing to catch a plane to Scotland to watch the Open golf championship. The offence carries a minimum fine of £60 and three penalty points, but he was let off on the grounds that ‘I’m in a hurry’.
8. Inflicting actual bodily harm.
Anyone else in Britain would have faced prison for dangerous driving causing actual bodily harm, but not Prince Andrew.
‘And he gets away with it. He hit a policeman as he sped into Buckingham Palace. The uniformed officer suffered an arm injury and complained to his bosses, but nothing was done.‘

9. What is it about British culture that renders this acceptable?
Lownie’s last book exposed the treacherous activity of the Duke of Windsor in his dealings with Nazi Germany.

Lownie’s book on the Mountbattens revealed that Lord Louis Mountbatten was a paedophile.

Lownie, a Cambridge educated historian, was denied access to Mountbatten’s diaries in a famous case. He spent up to £500,000 in an attempt to force the release of those documents. With a bit of luck, he will make that and more from the royalties from this book.

Further details about Mountbatten can be read here: The Mountbatten Dossier. [WebBook]
The philandering ways of Prince Andrew’s father, Prince Philip, can be read here: Prince Philip’s illicit sex life was monitored by Soviet spies. [WebBook]

10. Elite impunity.
Chris Moore is the author of a recently published book about the Kincora Boys’ Home sex abuse scandal in Northern Ireland. One of the VIPs who abused children from Kincora was Lord Mountbatten. Moore writes:
‘Then there is the story of Richard Kerr, who describes himself as one of Joe Mains’ favourite boys. [Mains was one of the Kinocra abusers.] Sexually violated from the age of eight whilst in care, Kerr has endured extreme hardship. But now he has chosen to speak out to reveal that he and his friend Stephen Waring were both sexually assaulted in August 1977 by Lord Mountbatten. He paints a disturbing picture of what appeared to be a routine visit to Mountbatten’s castle to provide the service. There is also Arthur Smyth’s evidence that he, too, was abused by ‘Dickie’. Both Kerr’s and Smyth’s compelling testimonies strengthen the possibility that protecting Mountbatten – a man with a notorious reputation for sexually assaulting young boys – was the primary reason for MI5’s interest in Kincora. Its mission was to keep it quiet. .. It seems that for MI5 ‘Regnum Defende’ (defence of the realm, the agency’s motto) was more important than defending those who could not defend themselves.‘
See also: Kincora’s darkest secret.


