
The article reports that newly surfaced emails suggest Jeffrey Epstein introduced Prince Andrew to a second woman whom Epstein had sexually abused and trafficked over many years. The Mail on Sunday (MoS) says the introduction occurred via email on August 11, 2010, when Epstein proposed that Andrew meet the woman for dinner in London between August 20–24. According to the messages quoted, Andrew replied that he would be delighted to see her after returning from Geneva and asked that she be given his contact details.
The MoS does not name the woman, describing her as a blue-eyed blonde, now 43, a former New York–based yoga instructor who is rebuilding her life with her young son. Her lawyer stated she is indeed the person referenced in separate Epstein-related correspondence with another wealthy man, while stressing she never met or was abused by that man. The lawyer declined to answer whether she met or was abused by Andrew, a silence that a legal source quoted by the paper characterizes as raising further questions but not constituting proof of wrongdoing.

Contextualizing the emails, the article notes this would be the second alleged link between Andrew and an Epstein victim, the first being Virginia Giuffre (who accused Andrew of sexual abuse, claims he has always denied). The MoS says Giuffre—whose posthumous memoir is due for publication—described meeting Andrew in London at age 17 in 2001 and being instructed by Ghislaine Maxwell to “do for him what you do for Jeffrey.” Andrew settled Giuffre’s civil lawsuit in 2022 for a reported £12 million without admitting liability. The piece adds that Andrew has been forced to relinquish his remaining royal titles following recent exclusives and that the Royal Family is “desperate” for the scandal to subside.
The article frames the newly reported email as significant because it appears to show a pattern of Epstein introducing young women to powerful men, in this case a senior royal. It underscores longstanding allegations that Epstein trafficked multiple girls and young women to associates, pointing to court documents and victim accounts more broadly. Still, it emphasizes that the woman’s legal representative would not confirm any meeting or abuse involving Andrew. A representative for Andrew declined to comment on the new emails.
Finally, the report situates these developments within intensified scrutiny of Andrew, including separate coverage about an alleged attempt to procure compromising information on Giuffre through a police bodyguard—now reportedly the subject of an active assessment by authorities. While careful to attribute claims and avoid definitive conclusions, the article argues the email cache heightens pressure on Andrew to address the introduction, answer outstanding questions, and reckon with the implications of Epstein’s efforts to connect him with a second known victim.

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