The Guardian (USA)

Prince Andrew and Ghislaine Maxwell owe it to their accusers to appear in court

- Gaby Hinsliff

Where is Ghislaine Maxwell? In the scandal engulfing her good friend the Duke of York, she is both everywhere and nowhere. Forever hovering just out of reach, rather as she does in that now notorious photograph of the prince with his arm around the bare midriff of a girl little older than his daughter. There have been a few sightings, one supposedly in a Los Angeles fast-food restaurant. Yet for now she remains in hiding, and with her lies the truth.

The former girlfriend of paedophile Jeffrey Epstein may be the only other living person who knows what happened, not just on the night that photograph was taken, when Virginia Giuffre (nee Roberts) says she was compelled to have sex with the Queen’s second son, but on so many other nights when, as she said on Monday night’s Panorama, she was “passed around like a platter of fruit” between Epstein’s friends.

There has rightly been outrage at Prince Andrew’s failure to drop Epstein once he was convicted of sex offences. But given Maxwell also stands accused, by a number of women in civil actions, of being complicit with her boyfriend in sex traffickin­g and abuse, it is just as astonishin­g that the prince was in touch with her as recently as this year. If, as he insists, they didn’t discuss Epstein

then it is frankly hard to know why not. Are we to believe he was simply too polite to mention the allegation that his friends had been running a sex-traffickin­g ring right under his nose?

Maxwell has been a curiously underexami­ned part of the story. Panorama included old footage from a photoshoot, in which she was seen laughing and asking how her hair looked. This was Maxwell the socialite, the billionair­e’s daughter, the magazine cover girl. But in their affidavits and in front of cameras, Epstein’s victims describe someone else entirely. They recall a bully “with a viciousnes­s to her”, in Giuffre’s words, who made sure Epstein got what he wanted; a woman they feared, and have accused not merely of turning a blind eye to his predation but in some cases of being an active participan­t.

By now, we are almost numb to stories of powerful old men doing terrible things to much younger women. But there is something viscerally dreadful about the idea of a woman – someone a younger girl might look to for rescue and protection – being in any way complicit in abuse. Giuffre told Panorama she felt sick when told to sleep with the prince because she hadn’t expected such behaviour from royalty, but what

made her cry was describing Maxwell praising her later for doing a good job.

Allegedy, allegedly, allegedly. For Maxwell denies all this, and Prince Andrew categorica­lly denies the allegation­s against him. Unless and until there is a trial we are stuck in the unsatisfac­tory land of the perenniall­y unproven. This case has made jurors of us all, given the only real point of a Panorama with little substantiv­ely new to say was to let audiences compare the respective credibilit­y of Prince Andrew and Virginia Giuffre as witnesses. He testified in his defence to Newsnight, and now Panorama has put the case for the prosecutio­n. All that can be said with any certainty is that the prince’s toe-curling claim to have been if anything “too honourable” in his dealings with Epstein looks worse with every passing day.

Where the prince blundered clumsily through his story, Giuffre was fluent and surprising­ly composed. But then she must have told this story so many times, to lawyers and journalist­s and FBI agents: how she was abused from the age of seven, ran away from home, and was just getting her life together with a job at Donald Trump’s Mar-aLago beach club when she encountere­d Maxwell, who suggested she train as a masseuse.

Her big mistake, she said bleakly, was to tell Epstein and his girlfriend the story of her damaged childhood: “Now they knew how vulnerable I was.” Panorama spliced her descriptio­n of dancing with the sweaty prince together with the prince’s wide-eyed claim that it was medically “impossible for him to sweat”, followed by archive footage of him emerging from nightclubs dampshirte­d. Five women have testified in the US that he was present when they gave massages to Epstein, despite the prince’s insistence that he never saw anything untoward. The prosecutio­n rests, your honour.

But the whole thing made uncomforta­ble watching. Why is this happening on TV, not in court? Where is the anonymity granted to victims of alleged sex offences during a British trial, the admittedly meagre dignity afforded by a legal process, the requiremen­t for all sides to testify on oath? Without the media these claims wouldn’t have come to light at all, yet justice should not rely on traffickin­g victims’ willingnes­s to speak out this publicly to remind us how catastroph­ically the system has failed.

And it is on the courts that the focus must fall. Now that Jeffrey Epstein is dead, there can be no peace for the damaged women he left behind until Ghislaine Maxwell faces their allegation­s in a court and Prince Andrew testifies under oath. Only then can all those who have suffered in various ways at Epstein’s hands possibly stand a chance of finally breaking free.

• Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

stupid he thinks Americans are, how beneath him they are, I have a feeling he would not be quite so popular. He might have a much harder time winning re-election.

What is it with the British? Johnson could call the “Great British public” all manner of names and it would not affect his son’s chance of being reelected. We are not a nation of shopkeeper­s; we are a nation of butlers, footmen and lady’s maids. We still show ridiculous reverence towards the monarchy. We still show an embarrassi­ng deference to the aristocrat­s and Old Etonians who rule over us. That deference is even more embarrassi­ng when you consider how little effort the party of privilege puts into showing respect towards ordinary people. The Conservati­ves have let the mask slip many times. Remember when Boris Johnson mocked the 16% “of our species” with an IQ below 85? When Jacob Rees-Mogg said Grenfell victims lacked

“common sense”? When the Tory MP Andrew Bridgen backed him up and suggested Rees-Mogg was cleverer than the people who had died in the fire? When Michael Gove said that people who were forced to go to food banks had brought it on themselves because they were not “best able to manage their finances”?

The Conservati­ves have made it abundantly clear how little respect they have for the British people. On 12 December, let’s make it clear how little respect we have for them.

•Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

 ?? Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘Ghislaine Maxwell is both everywhere and nowhere.’ Prince Andrew, Virginia Roberts and Maxwellin 2001.
Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck ‘Ghislaine Maxwell is both everywhere and nowhere.’ Prince Andrew, Virginia Roberts and Maxwellin 2001.

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