From former US presidents to Nobel prize-winning
scientists, Jeffrey Epstein had a rare knack for collecting acquaintances from
the globe’s most powerful and rarefied walks of life.
The former Manhattan maths tutor turned
multi-millionaire financier first became a fixture on the New York social scene
in the early 1990s, amassing a list of contacts – from Bill Clinton to Donald
Trump to Kevin Spacey – that competed only with his property portfolio in shiny
exclusivity.
It was while moving in these circles
that Epstein, a sharp-minded philanthropist who has donated millions to
scientific research, came into contact with Prince Andrew, probably in 2000
when the Duke of York was on the cusp of a new career as a trade envoy for
Britain.
What resulted was a friendship that
stood the test of time, at some cost to the man fifth in line to the British
throne.
As Epstein cut a worthy swathe through
high society, flying Mr Clinton to an Aids conference and endowing Harvard with
$30m, he was also indulging a proclivity for sex with minors.
Many of Epstein’s contacts rapidly
disappeared when he became the subject of criminal proceedings that eventually
resulted in 2008 in an 18-month jail term for soliciting prostitution with an
underage girl after an 11-month police investigation.
But Andrew remained unswervingly – even
perplexingly – loyal.
In 2011, a friend of both men told
Vanity Fair magazine that Epstein had helped shape the Prince as a more relaxed
individual – but after the financier’s conviction Andrew had been advised to
sever all links.
The unnamed friend said the Prince told
him: “Leave me alone, Jeffrey’s my friend. Being loyal to your friends is a
virtue. And I’m going to be loyal to him.”
At least until December 2010, that loyalty manifested itself in meetings between the two men, including several holidays. When Epstein was released from jail, the Prince was on a guest list for a dinner at his Fifth Avenue mansion which also included Woody Allen. The financier proved a worthy and generous friend, at one point paying £15,000 to help an indebted Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York.
Links between Epstein and the Prince
were eventually severed – but the price of Andrew’s loyalty was a succession of
carefully worded media reports alleging that the royal had met some of the
financier’s victims and attended parties where sexual exploitation was alleged
to have taken place. Such claims were flatly denied by Andrew and robustly
batted away by his representatives.
It was not until yesterday that the
allegations were taken a step further by naming the Prince in a document before
a court claiming he had “sexual relations” with one of Epstein’s coterie of
young women.
The 13-page document filed to Florida
District Court on Tuesday claims that Ghislaine Maxwell, the well-connected
daughter of the tainted newspaper tycoon Robert Maxwell, introduced Andrew to
Epstein and acted as a “madame” for the financier – an allegation which she has
consistently strongly denied.
It is alleged that Epstein “forced” an
unnamed girl to sleep with the Prince at three locations – Ms Maxwell’s London
flat, an unspecified location in New York and on the banker’s private island in
US Virgin Islands “in an orgy with numerous other under-aged girls”. The girl
is believed to have been aged over 16 at the time. Under Florida state law,
under-18s are regarded as minors, whereas the age of consent is 16 in Britain.
The document alleges that the girl –
referred to as Jane Doe 3 – was supplied by Epstein in the same way to a
bewildering array of high-profile figures – including “numerous prominent
American politicians, powerful business executives, foreign presidents, a
well-known prime minister, and other world leaders”.
It adds: “Epstein required Jane Doe 3
to describe the events that she had with these men so that he could potentially
blackmail them.”
Buckingham Palace yesterday initially
declined to comment on the claims made in the court papers on the grounds that
it could not comment on ongoing legal proceedings.
But as it became clear that the story
was being widely reported, aides issued an emphatic denial, pointing out he was
not a party to the Florida proceedings before adding that “any suggestion of
impropriety with underage minors is categorically untrue”.
For both Epstein and his one-time royal
friend, the matter is nonetheless unlikely to end there. Andrew remains an
object of fascination on both sides of the Atlantic while the financier remains
dogged by his past and has reportedly settled out of court 14 civil damages
claims against him.
While others have labelled him a
paedophile, the multi-millionaire, who eschews alcohol in favour of Earl Grey
tea and a daily dose of yoga, denies he was ever a predator.
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