The brother of Virginia Roberts Giuffre on Friday praised King Charles III’s decision to strip his brother Andrew of his princely title and spacious home, but urged the monarch to now put pressure on the U.S. government.
"He (King Charles III) is setting a precedent to the rest of the world to say, 'I do stand with survivors, I am going to to hold even my brother to account,'" Sky Roberts told Sky News.
"But it's still not enough in the sense that he (Andrew) is still walking around a free man," he added, calling for the former prince to be investigated further and for the king to urge the Trump administration to release the so-called Epstein files.
Giuffre’s family declared victory on behalf of Andrew’s accuser, who died by suicide in April at the age of 41.
She always claimed that back in the early 2000s, when she was a teenager, she was caught up in Jeffrey Epstein’s sex trafficking ring and exploited by Andrew and other influential men.
Epstein was found dead in a New York City jail cell in 2019 in what investigators called a suicide.
King Charles acted to stem mounting public disapproval as damning new details emerged about Andrew's relationship with the convicted sex offender.
Charles moved to preserve the monarchy from the fallout by forcibly removing a British prince’s title for the first time in a century.
The former Prince Andrew is now known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.
As of Friday, he was no longer listed on the roll of the peerage, where he had previously appeared as Duke of York, another of his titles.
He also will move out of Royal Lodge, the 30-room mansion near Windsor Castle where he has lived for more than 20 years, and into a more remote home funded by his brother on the king's 20,000-acre (8,100 hectare) Sandringham Estate in eastern England.
Andrew surrendered his use of the title Duke of York earlier this month over new revelations about his friendship with Epstein and renewed sexual abuse allegations in Giuffre's posthumous memoir.
He denies all her claims.
But the king went even further to punish him for serious lapses of judgment by removing the title of prince that he has held since birth as a child of a monarch, the late Queen Elizabeth II.
Andrew also lost the designation “his royal highness,” making the former prince effectively a commoner now.
He could now face legal trouble in Britain, where police are investigating a claim that he asked one of this police bodyguards to dig up dirt on Giuffre.
A committee of U.K. lawmakers is also looking into how he paid for Royal Lodge, which he leased for a nominal annual fee — known as a “peppercorn rent.”
Andrew faced a new round of public outrage after emails emerged earlier this month showing he had remained in contact with Epstein longer than he previously admitted.
Then came publication of “Nobody’s Girl,” by Giuffre, who alleged she had sex with Andrew three times, the first when she was 17.
She claimed he acted as if he believed “having sex with me was his birthright.”
Andrew has long denied Giuffre’s claims, but stepped down from royal duties after a disastrous November 2019 BBC interview in which he attempted to rebut her allegations.
In 2022, Andrew paid millions to settle a civil suit filed by Giuffre in New York.

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