Prince Andrew reportedly hires top extradition lawyer
Prince Andrew has reportedly hired a top extradition lawyer
in Britain and is refusing to assist federal prosecutors investigating alleged
child sex trafficking by his one-time friend Jeffrey Epstein.
Those prosecutors in New York now are considering their
“options” for dealing with Andrew, a top official said Monday.
Andrew, a son of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, claimed in
November he was willing to help law-enforcement officials in their investigations
of the wealthy investor who killed himself in a federal jail last August while
awaiting trial.
But Geoffrey Berman, the U.S. attorney for the Southern
District of New York, told reporters on Monday that the Duke of York has ruled
out cooperating with investigators from his office.
“Contrary to Prince Andrew’s very public offer to cooperate
with our investigation into Epstein’s co-conspirators, an offer that was
conveyed via press release, Prince Andrew has now completely shut the door on
voluntary cooperation,” Berman said at a press conference.
“And our office is considering our options,” said Berman.
It is not clear whether Berman would wd be able to force
Andrew’s cooperation.
On Friday, the Daily Telegraph in Britain reported that
Andrew had hired Clare Montgomery, a lawyer whom the newspaper described as
“the leading expert on extradition law.”
A spokeswoman for Montgomery’s law firm, Matrix Chambers,
declined to comment on the Telegraph’s report when contacted Monday by CNBC.
Montgomery’s clients have include Chile’s former dictator
Augusto Pinochet in his ultimately successful fight against extradition from
Britain on human rights violations charges issed by a Spanish magistrate, as
well as fugitive India diamond merchant Nirav Modi in his bid to avoid
extradition on fraud and money laundering charges.
And “she has successfully represented a string of prominent
Russian citizens who have been the focus of requests from the Russian
Federation,” according to her biography says on Matrix Chambers’s website.
Montgomery also represented the Swedish Judicial Authority
in its effort to have WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange extradited from Long to
Sweden to face sex assault charges there lodged by two women.
Berman had told reporters in January that “to date, Prince
Andrew has provided zero cooperation” to federal law enforcement
invesrtigators.
“Jeffrey Epstein couldn’t have done what he did without the
assistance of others, and I can assure you that the investigation is moving
forward,” Berman said at the time.
Buckingham Palace has not responded to Berman’s comments on
Monday.
Berman’s office last summer obtained an indictment against
Epstein charging the former friend of Presidents Donald Trump and Bill Clinton
with child sex trafficking.
Epstein, 66, was accused of sexually abusing dozens of
underage girls in New York and in Palm Beach, Florida, from 2002 through 2005.
After Epstein died, Berman said the investigation into other
people who may have abetted Epstein’s crimes would continue.
But no one else has been charged.
Months after Epstein’s death, Andrew sparked a furor with a
disastrous interview with the BBC about his relationship with Epstein.
Andrew, among other things, denied having sex years ago with
one of Epstein’s accusers, Virginia Giuffre, as she has claimed. He said he was
as incapable of sweating, as Giuffre described him doing when they were dancing
at a London nightclub.
Giuffre has said she was directed to have sex with Andrew by
Ghislaine Maxwell, the longtime Epstein friend who has been accused in court
documents of being a procurer of girls to satisfy his compulsive need for
sexual services.
In the same interview, Andrew justified his decision to stay
at Epstein’s house in Manhattan for four days in 2010 during a visit to end
their friendship by saying it was “a convenient place to stay.”
After widespread backlash to his interview, Andrew announced
that he was stepping back from his official public duties “for the foreseeable
future.”
He also said he was willing to help law-enforcement
authorities with investigations of Epstein.
“I continue to unequivocally regret my ill-judged
association with Jeffrey Epstein,” Andrew said in a statement in November after
the interview.
“His suicide has left many unanswered questions,
particularly for his victims, and I deeply sympathise with everyone who has
been affected and wants some form of closure,” the prince said.
“I can only hope that, in time, they will be able to rebuild
their lives. Of course, I am willing to help any appropriate law enforcement
agency with their investigations, if required.”
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