Overview
- Andrew Mountbatten‑Windsor did not reply by the 20 November deadline for a House Oversight transcribed interview, prompting Democrats Robert Garcia and Suhas Subramanyam to say his "silence" "speaks volumes."
- The committee cannot compel a foreign national to testify, yet members said their Epstein inquiry will continue without his cooperation.
- UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said anyone with relevant information should give evidence, indicating Andrew should consider cooperating even though the choice is his.
- President Donald Trump signed legislation requiring the Justice Department to make Epstein-related documents public within 30 days.
- Scrutiny in the UK is broadening, with the City of London Corporation weighing the removal of his Freedom of the City and the Metropolitan Police reviewing reports about a 2011 request to his bodyguard; Andrew denies the allegations.