Lawyers say that Prince Andrew’s Newsnight interview ‘ignored victims’.
Photograph: BBC
Prince Andrew is facing a transatlantic backlash over his extraordinary defence of his friendship with Jeffrey Epstein
after lawyers who represent 10 of the billionaire predator’s victims
branded the royal unrepentant and implausible and demanded that he speak
to the FBI.
After the royal’s defiant Newsnight
interview on Saturday triggered a disbelieving reaction from the public
and the media, the prince was under growing pressure from critics in
the UK and US on Sunday who demanded an apology for his conduct and said
that his defence of his actions was simply not credible.
Gloria Allred, who has worked on numerous high-profile sexual
harassment cases and is now representing five of Epstein’s victims, told
the Guardian: “The right and honourable action for Prince Andrew
to take now is for him to volunteer to be interviewed by the FBI and
prosecutors for the southern district of New York [who are continuing to
investigate sex-trafficking allegations against Epstein despite his
death in prison in August].
“Prince Andrew has decided to enter the court of public opinion with
this interview and people can decide whether to believe him or not. The
most important part of this is the victims and very little was said
about them in this interview. They were almost completely ignored.” Timeline
The Duke of York's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein
Show
Los Angeles-based lawyer Lisa Bloom, who represents another five
victims, told the Guardian that Andrew’s intervention fell far short of
ending questions over his relationship with Epstein.
Advertisement
“Prince
Andrew’s interview was deeply disappointing,” Bloom – who is Allred’s
daughter – told the Guardian. “He is entitled to deny allegations and
defend himself. But where is his apology for being so closely associated
with one of history’s most prolific paedophiles?”
In the interview, Andrew said he had been in Pizza Express in Woking on the day of his alleged meeting with accuser Virginia Giuffre;
claimed a condition linked to the Falklands war that prevented him from
sweating undermined her story; and described Epstein’s history of
paedophilia as “unbecoming” but refused to express regret for their
friendship.
On a day of escalating difficulty for the prince: • Former royal press officers and PR experts described his appearance as “excruciating” and “arrogant”. • It emerged that a key PR adviser
brought in to help salvage Andrew’s reputation had left after just weeks
in the job and only a fortnight before the interview was broadcast
after he advised the prince against it. • The Guardian learned that after filming
of the interview concluded, Andrew had been pleased enough with how it
had gone that he gave the Newsnight team a tour of Buckingham Palace. • The students’ union at Huddersfield
University, where Andrew is chancellor, unanimously backed a motion
demanding that he resign from the post. • Sources in the prince’s private office
insisted that he stood by the interview and believed he had dealt with
the issues with “honesty and humility”.
The two lawyers’ interventions echoed posts on the Twitter account of
Giuffre (formerly Roberts), who has claimed that Epstein and his
“fixer” Ghislaine Maxwell forced her to have sex with Andrew when she
was 17 – allegations Andrew has always vehemently denied.
While she has not directly commented on the weekend’s revelations,
she retweeted numerous messages that were scathing of Andrew’s claims.
During the interview, the prince repeatedly said he had no
recollection of ever meeting Giuffre or having his picture taken with
her, despite the existence of an image of them together that has been
widely circulated.
Elsewhere, he said he would remember if he had had sex with her, because it is a “positive act” for a man, and denied he had.
Meanwhile, her lawyer, Jack Sarcola, said that talking to the media
“didn’t cut it” and that Andrew should give an interview under oath.
Allred said her clients had willingly spoken with investigators but
she declined, under attorney-client privilege, to say if any had
mentioned Prince Andrew.
She added: “Prince Andrew said he would follow the advice of his
lawyers, but if he has nothing to hide, and he has committed no crime,
why doesn’t he just make the decision to share what he does know about
Mr Epstein, his close associates and employees with the FBI? Why does he need a lawyer to tell him to do that?”
Bloom – who has battled to regain her credibility as a sexual
harassment lawyer after she worked with Harvey Weinstein – pointed out
that Andrew had said he did not regret his friendship with Epstein
“because of the people he met”.
Saying that some answers were “simply not credible”, she added: “The
lengthy interview lacked any statement that he joins all decent people
in being appalled and revolted by what we now know about Jeffrey
Epstein’s predatory behaviour.”
The scathing US verdict on the interview came as the prince faced
further criticism in the UK. Former Buckingham Palace press officer
Dickie Arbiter told the BBC “any sensible-thinking person in the PR business would have thrown their hands up in horror”.
He said that the interview was “not so much a car crash but an articulated lorry crash”.
Meanwhile, businesses and charities were under growing pressure to
review their links to the prince and his pitch@palace initiative for
entrepreneurs, which stages events at Buckingham Palace and around the
world.
Barclays, KMPG, Standard Chartered and the Stelios Foundation are all listed as partners of Pitch@Palace, which links tech entrepreneurs to people who can help their business.
“Anyone associated with organisations with Andrew’s patronages should
at least review their involvement,” said Catherine Mayer, a royal
biographer who is also president and co-founder of the Women’s Equality
Party (WEP).
“In the case of the MeToo movement, the men who were identified
reacted not with any genuine contrition but by seeking to portray
themselves as victims themselves. In doing so they always erase the
victims.”
In the charity sector, the National Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) took the step on Twitter of repeatedly
responding to questions about “dropping” the prince as a patron by
pointing out that his role as patron of its Full Stop campaign, which sought to draw attention to child abuse as an issue, ended in 2009.
Members of the students’ union at the University of Huddersfield will
on Monday discuss pushing for him to resign as chancellor after there
was unanimous support for a motion stating that they “should not be represented by a man with ties to organised child sexual exploitation and assault”.
The university itself issued a statement pointing to the prince’s
previous denial and lauding him for taking a keen interest in its work
and describing his “enthusiasm for innovation and entrepreneurship” as
“a natural fit”.
Prince Andrew: Calls for royal to say sorry and speak to FBI
Reviewed by hafizbd
on
November 17, 2019
Rating: 5
No comments