Britain's Prince Andrew among global figures under scrutiny after Epstein's death

LONDON — Britain’s Prince Andrew, one of Queen Elizabeth II’s four children, is among the prominent figures to be engulfed in the uproar following Jeffrey Epstein’s death in a Manhattan jail.

On Sunday, Epstein’s death by apparent suicide as he was being held on sex trafficking charges was featured in news bulletins and newspaper front pages outside of the U.S. — in part thanks to a number of high-profile international personalities with ties to the disgraced financier who were mentioned in the newly released deposition of one of his alleged victims.

Andrew, the queen’s 59-year-old second-born son, was named in court documents released on Friday.

The court documents relate to a 2015 defamation lawsuit that Epstein’s alleged victim, Virginia Roberts Giuffre, filed against British socialite and former longtime member of Epstein’s inner circle, Ghislaine Maxwell.

In her 2016 deposition included in the documents released on Friday, Johanna Sjoberg — a woman who alleged she was forced to have sex with Epstein by Maxwell — said that Andrew touched her breast while they sat on a couch in Epstein’s Manhattan apartment in 2001.

When NBC News asked Buckingham Palace to comment on the allegations that emerged on Friday, a royal spokesperson said: “This relates to proceedings in the United States, to which The Duke of York is not a party. Any suggestion of impropriety with underage minors is categorically untrue.”

The unsealed court documents revealed that Giuffre, now 36, said in her own 2016 deposition that Epstein and Maxwell directed her to provide sexual services for a number powerful American and foreign men — including a “foreign president,” “a well-known prime minister” and a “large hotel chain owner.”

Buckingham Palace has previously emphatically denied all allegations stemming from the 2015 court case, including Giuffre saying that she was directed to have sex with Andrew on Maxwell’s orders.

The prince’s name topped the headlines in British tabloids Sunday morning despite the palace’s vehement denials.

“Prince Andrew faces new Epstein anguish,” the Daily Mail’s headline stated.

The Sun, one of the most-read tabloids in the U.K., went with: “Prince Andrew’s paedo pal Jeffrey Epstein found hanged in jail…”

Evidence photo of Virginia Giuffre (now Roberts) with Prince Andrew and Ghislaine Maxwell, inside Prince Andrew’s London home

A photograph showing Epstein and Prince Andrew apparently walking in New York’s Central Park in 2010 also appeared on some of the front pages. NBC News was not able to independently confirm the location and date of the photograph.

With Epstein dead, Maxwell, who is also British, was subjected to intensifying scrutiny on Sunday.

The daughter of the late publishing mogul Robert Maxwell, she was a close friend and confidante of Epstein’s after they were first romantically linked in the early 1990s, according to reports.

Along with Epstein, Giuffre claimed Maxwell groomed her to become a “sex slave.”

Giuffre alleged that Maxwell directed her to travel and provide sexual services for high-profile men.

“There’s a whole bunch of them — it’s just hard for me to remember,” said Giuffre, according to the court filing. “My whole life revolved around just pleasing these men and keeping Ghislaine and Jeffrey happy. Their whole lives revolved around sex.”

Previously, in a motion to dismiss the 2015 suit, Maxwell’s lawyers said Giuffre “produced no evidence substantiating any of her fantastical claims that she had been trafficked by Epstein, or by Maxwell, to any of these men or any others.”

source: nbcnews.com