Overview
- Sixteen Democratic members of the House Oversight Committee asked Mountbatten-Windsor to sit for a transcribed interview to aid their inquiry into Jeffrey Epstein’s enablers and operations.
- Committee members said a subpoena remains possible but acknowledged Congress cannot practically compel testimony from a non‑U.S. citizen residing in the U.K.
- The letter cites flight logs, publicly reported trips with Epstein, a 2011 email reading “we are in this together,” and financial records with notations such as “massage for Andrew.”
- U.K. officials, including Communities Secretary Steve Reed and Prime Minister Keir Starmer, said he should help if he has relevant information, though the decision is his.
- Buckingham Palace has removed his royal and military styles and moved to take back his Royal Lodge lease; he has consistently denied the allegations and previously settled Giuffre’s civil suit in 2022 without admitting liability.