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Pressure mounts for Sarah Ferguson to give evidence on Epstein
US lawmakers and victims' families demand Sarah Ferguson testify about her ties with Jeffrey Epstein amid revelations from millions of Department of Justice documents.
- Lawmakers and commentators have increased pressure on Sarah Ferguson, the former Duchess of York, to give evidence after the US Department of Justice published millions of Epstein files earlier this year.
- Documents include messages that link Ferguson to Epstein during and after his 2008 conviction, showing she praised him and took her daughters to lunch with him shortly after his release.
- After earlier revelations she was dropped by multiple charities and has stayed out of public view, her representatives declined to comment amid rumours of six-figure interview offers from US media networks.
- The City of York councillors are meeting on March 26 to consider removing her freedom of the City of York, following her loss of royal titles last year and Andrew's 2022 precedent.
- Andrew Lownie, biographer, called Ferguson a 'material witness' and said 'She visited his homes regularly', while Gloria Allred urged sworn testimony, but there is no legal mechanism to compel her in the US.
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12 Articles
12 Articles
Demands are growing for Sarah Ferguson to testify about her Epstein connections, the BBC reports. But the former ex-wife of Prince Andrew continues to dodge the public eye.
·Stockholm, Sweden
Read Full ArticleUS Congress calls on Sarah Ferguson to give evidence: 'She has information!'
US lawmakers have called on Sarah Ferguson to testify under oath to the House Oversight Committee about her links with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.US officials have repeatedly called on Ms Ferguson’s ex-husband, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, but have not received any response. Congressman Suhas Subramanyam, a member of the HOC investigating Epstein’s prosecution, said the former duchess had “information related to the investigation.“Sarah…
·London, United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources12
Leaning Left4Leaning Right5Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution46% Right
Bias Distribution
- 46% of the sources lean Right
46% Right
L 36%
C 18%
R 46%
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