Will bombshell Epstein videos show Prince Andrew with sex slave?
Virginia Giuffre received an estimated $20 million in an out-of-court settlement with the royal in 2022

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Prince Andrew fears that “tens of thousands” of videos taken by his pal, billionaire pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, will show the royal with Virginia Giuffre, according to a royal source.
According to U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, the FBI is reviewing the videos for evidence to be used against Epstein’s coterie of twisted, wealthy friends.
In the days before she took her own life, longtime Epstein sex slave Giuffre filed legal papers outlining her belief that authorities have in their hands footage of her having sex with men in the hedge fund headcase’s circle.

U.S. President Donald Trump has vowed to make the tapes public, and sources said that the release of the “bulk” of the files is now being worked on.
“Andrew will be sweating over their release. If there’s anything in there that involves him, it would pile more misery and humiliation on him,” a royal source told the U.K. Sun.
Giuffre has claimed for years she was sexually assaulted by the Duke of York when she was just 17 and encouraged by former Epstein gal pal, disgraced socialite Ghislaine Maxwell.

Epstein, who killed himself in August 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, was notorious for having his far-reaching real estate holdings wired for video and sound.
The serial sex abuser kept thousands of tapes, allegedly to use as bargaining chips if he was arrested or being investigated. Federal agents seized the tapes during raids after Epstein was arrested.
Journalist Barry Levine, who wrote the seminal Epstein book The Spider: Inside the Criminal Web of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, said that Giuffre revealed a “specific personal detail” about Andrew, alleged to be “highly embarrassing.”
Giuffre claimed she had sex with the prince on three occasions when she was underage. Andrew has categorically denied the allegations.
But that didn’t stop him from paying her more than an estimated $20 million in an out-of-court settlement in 2022.
Giuffre was one of the earliest and most prominent accusers of Epstein and Maxwell.

She was 16 and working as a towel girl at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach when she met Maxwell, who offered her an opportunity to work for Epstein as a massage therapist.
“They seemed like nice people, so I trusted them, and I told them I’d had a really hard time in my life up until then — I’d been a runaway, I’d been sexually abused, physically abused,” Giuffre told the BBC.
“That was the worst thing I could have told them because now they knew how vulnerable I was.”
From her first day with the couple, Giuffre (then Virginia Roberts) was groomed to sexually service their carnal needs, along with their friends.
She said: “It started with one and it trickled into two and so on and before you know it, I’m being lent out to politicians and academics and royalty.”
Meanwhile, in the dark days before her death, Giuffre was “extremely distressed” over fears that another Epstein victim suing her in court would take her millions.

Giuffre, 41, was being sued by artist Rina Oh, whom she alleged was Epstein’s girlfriend and one of his recruiters. Her money stemmed from the lawsuit against Prince Andrew and payouts from the Epstein compensation fund.
In addition, she was said to be depressed over the implosion of her marriage and not being allowed to see her children.
“Virginia was extremely distressed in the weeks before she died,” a friend told the Daily Mirror. “She felt like everything she had fought so hard for was going or gone.”
@HunterTOSun
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