Another Jeffrey Epstein victim recently told his own story about Andrew Mountbatten Windsor and the known amateur.
The victim in question is Anne Fisher and she just spoke with ITV News about one of her own encounters with the convicted sex offender at his Upper East Side mansion in 2001.
For those who don’t know, at the time Fisher was informed that a business meeting was taking place and after the first alleged assault, she was offered a check which she claims she rejected.
Fisher began his account by saying: “When I was there he said to me, ‘Oh, you should come to a dinner, you’re English and I can introduce you to the royal family.’ And I was like, “Okay. » But after he attacked me, I wanted nothing to do with it.
But “later I learned that [the then] Prince Andrew had a thing for Princess Di, so I kind of set him up” and “called my boyfriend at the time, sobbing and hysterical,” she recalls.
The meeting was reportedly followed by calls from Epstein’s assistant who called “repeatedly” on his cell phone, landline, etc. to organize this dinner.
For those who don’t know, one of Andrew Mountbatten Windsor’s most vocal accusers was an Australian woman named Virginia Giuffre, who has since died by suicide, and her posthumously published memoir, Nobody’s Girl, tells her story in detail.
According to the book’s blurb from Penguin Random House, “Here, Giuffre offers a blunt and definitive account of her time with Epstein and Maxwell, who trafficked her and others to numerous prominent men.” »
“It also details the abuse she suffered as a child, as well as her daring escape from the grasp of Epstein and Maxwell at nineteen. Giuffre rebuilt her life from scratch and found the courage not only to hold her abusers accountable, but to stand up for other victims. The pages of Nobody’s Girl preserve her voice – and her legacy – forever.”
“Nobody’s Girl is a stunning affirmation of Giuffre’s unwavering will: first, to emerge from victimhood, then to shine a light on wrongdoing and fight for a safer, more just world. Both intimate and fierce, it is a remarkable tale of courage in the face of depravity and despair.”
Since the publication of the memoirs, Andrew has not only lost his military honors, but has also been forced to renounce the public use of his dukedom. All this happened before he was stripped of his hereditary title of “prince” by his brother and monarch as well.




