Miami Herald

Prince Andrew sought Washington lobbyist to help with Epstein case

- BY KENNETH P. VOGEL New York Times

WASHINGTON

Prince Andrew’s lawyers had discussion­s with a Washington lobbyist about the possibilit­y of assisting the prince with fallout from his relationsh­ip with disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Lawyers from the Londonbase­d firm Blackfords consulted the lobbyist, Robert Stryk, who represents internatio­nal figures with sensitive legal or diplomatic issues, in recent weeks about Andrew’s situation, according to a person familiar with the circumstan­ces.

Stryk has a history of taking on clients with unsavory reputation­s. But he expressed discomfort about the possibilit­y of assisting Andrew, and talks about the potential representa­tion appear to have fizzled, according to the person familiar with the situation.

It is not clear precisely what type of assistance Blackfords might have been seeking from Stryk, who is not a lawyer, or what he could do to help Andrew. Nor is it clear whether Blackfords has reached out to other Washington lobbyists or consultant­s about working on the issue.

Neither Stryk nor any other U.S. consultant is listed as having registered with the Justice Department to represent Andrew, which could be required under the Foreign Agents Registrati­on Act if a consulting arrangemen­t had been reached involving lobbying or public relations.

Blackfords has been representi­ng Andrew, the Duke of York, in a contentiou­s backand-forth with federal prosecutor­s in New York who are investigat­ing allegation­s of sex traffickin­g and other crimes by Epstein and his associates. Andrew, 60, has not been charged in the case.

But in August, Virginia Roberts Giuffre accused the prince of having sex with her three times when she was 17 years old after she was connected to him by Epstein.

The prince denied her claim in an interview with the BBC in August and sought to minimize his friend- ship with Epstein, who killed himself last summer at a federal jail in New York City while awaiting trial on sex traffickin­g and conspiracy charges. Andrew met Epstein through Ghislaine Maxwell, a British socialite and Epstein’s onetime girlfriend, who was arrested Thursday and charged with luring multiple underage girls into Epstein’s orbit.

Andrew had indicated a willingnes­s to help U.S. law enforcemen­t officials with their investigat­ions late last year. But since then, prosecutor­s in New York have publicly criticized him on multiple occasions for offering “zero cooperatio­n” and for stonewalli­ng.

The prince’s lawyers at Blackfords shot back in a statement last month. They accused Geoffrey S. Berman, who had served as the U.S. attorney in Manhattan until being fired late last month, of making “inaccurate” statements about Andrew, suggesting that the prosecutor and his colleagues were “perhaps seeking publicity rather than accepting the assistance proffered.”

Blackfords did not respond to requests for comment. Stryk declined to comment.

Stryk owns a company called Sonoran Policy Group, which casts itself as a “global private diplomacy” firm. He has developed a reputation in recent years for taking on clients other Washington lobbyists and consultant­s shy away from.

This yeara, his firm has signed contracts to represent a jailed Saudi prince who had fallen out of favor with his country’s powerful de facto leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and the administra­tion of President Nicolás Maduro of Venezuela.

 ?? Courtesy of Virginia Roberts ?? Virginia Giuffre, center, socialized with Prince Andrew as Jeffrey Epstein associate Guislaine Maxwell watches.
Courtesy of Virginia Roberts Virginia Giuffre, center, socialized with Prince Andrew as Jeffrey Epstein associate Guislaine Maxwell watches.

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