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Andrew: Woman in Epstein photos called a sex trafficking victim
Summary
A US congressman told a House hearing that a woman pictured with Andrew in photos from Jeffrey Epstein's New York home should be treated as a sex trafficking victim, while US Attorney General Pam Bondi said the images do not prove criminality.
Content
California congressman Ted Lieu told a House Judiciary Committee hearing that a woman shown on the floor beneath Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor in photos from Jeffrey Epstein's files should be treated as a sex trafficking victim. The images were among documents published by the US Department of Justice at the end of January. Attorney General Pam Bondi said the woman's face had been redacted under laws protecting trafficking victims and denied that the photographs proved criminality. US authorities have not brought charges against Andrew.
Key points:
- Representative Ted Lieu described the woman in the images as a sex trafficking victim while questioning Attorney General Pam Bondi.
- Pam Bondi said the woman's face was redacted to protect trafficking victims and that the photos do not, on their own, establish criminality.
- The Department of Justice released a large trove of Epstein-related documents and has not filed charges against Andrew.
- UK police and prosecutors have held discussions about related allegations; the Director of Public Prosecutions said formal advice has not yet been requested.
Summary:
The claim has increased scrutiny of Andrew's links to Jeffrey Epstein in both the US and the UK. Investigations and official discussions are ongoing, and the next formal prosecutorial steps are undetermined at this time.
