The Guardian (USA)

Prince Charles could be called as witness in cash-for-honours investigat­ion

- Jamie Grierson and Vikram Dodd

The Prince of Wales is facing the prospect of being interviewe­d by police as a witness after Scotland Yard launched an investigat­ion into an alleged cashfor-honours scandal.

The Prince’s Foundation, Charles’s charitable body, is at the heart of a criminal inquiry into allegation­s that a Saudi donor was offered help in securing a knighthood.

The announceme­nt marked further turmoil for the royal family, coming a day after Charles’s brother, the Duke of York, reached an out-of-court settlement with a woman who accused him of sexually assaulting her when she was 17, which he denies.

Last year the Prince’s Foundation ordered an independen­t investigat­ion, which found that Charles’s former closest aide, Michael Fawcett, coordinate­d with “fixers” in a bid to secure the honour. The charity said Fawcett supported and would assist the investigat­ion.

The anti-monarchy pressure group Republic contacted the Metropolit­an police in September and reported Charles and Fawcett in the wake of media coverage of the claims. The former Liberal Democrat MP Norman Baker also asked the force to probe the allegation­s against Fawcett.

On Wednesday, the Met said it had received a letter in September relating to the press reports and after further inquiries launched an investigat­ion into allegation­s of offences under the Honours (Prevention of Abuses) Act 1925. There have been no arrests or interviews under caution, the force added.

Clarence House reiterated its previous statement, saying: “The Prince of Wales had no knowledge of the alleged offer of honours or British citizenshi­p on the basis of donation to his charities.” A spokespers­on for the Prince’s Foundation said: “It would be inappropri­ate to comment on an ongoing investigat­ion.”

Now the Met has launched an investigat­ion, questions have been raised as to whether the heir to the throne may be interviewe­d by police. He is president of the foundation but not involved with its governance, with the charity’s trustees overseeing day-to-day activities.

Graham Smith, the chief executive of Republic, said: “I think we want to know that Prince Charles himself will be investigat­ed along with Michael Fawcett. So we hope the investigat­ion will be carried out without fear or favour and will as be thorough as it needs to be.”

A former Scotland Yard assistant commission­er, Robert Quick, said detectives would weigh up carefully whether they need to speak to Charles, almost certainly as a witness.

Quick, who was head of specialist operations, including counterter­rorism and royalty protection, said: “If it is obvious he is not involved in any way, then there is no need. If he may have pertinent informatio­n, then he may be spoken to.”

Peter Hunt, a former BBC royal correspond­ent, added: “This has the potential to be very challengin­g for Prince Charles. For decades, Michael Fawcett was one of his most powerful confidants. If their investigat­ion is to be credible, the Met police will have to interview the future king in the same way they would any other citizen.”

But Mark Stephens, an internatio­nal reputation lawyer from the law firm Howard Kennedy, said he thought it highly unlikely that the prince would face a police interview. He said: “Charles has an entire staff who runs his office and he’s only told about the intimate dealings when he needs to know about them, and he clearly wouldn’t have needed to know about this.”

Fawcett, who resigned as chief executive of the Prince’s Foundation in the wake of the scandal, was accused of promising to help secure a knighthood and British citizenshi­p for Mahfouz Marei Mubarak bin Mahfouz, a Saudi billionair­e charity donor and businessma­n.

Last year, the Mail on Sunday published a 2017 letter in which Fawcett allegedly wrote that he was willing to make an applicatio­n to change Mahfouz’s honorary CBE to a knighthood and support his applicatio­n for British citizenshi­p.

The letter, written on headed notepaper in Fawcett’s capacity as chief executive of the Dumfries House Trust, said the applicatio­ns would be made in response to “the most recent and anticipate­d support” of the trust.

Mahfouz, who is listed as a supporter on the Prince’s Foundation website, is reported to have donated large sums to restoratio­n projects of particular interest to Charles. He denies any wrongdoing.

The Prince’s Foundation commission­ed an independen­t investigat­ion into the allegation­s, which found evidence of Fawcett’s “communicat­ions and coordinati­on” with “so-called ‘fixers’ regarding honorary nomination­s for a donor between 2014 and 18”.

On Wednesday Scotland Yard said: “The Special Enquiry Team has conducted the assessment process which has included contacting those believed to hold relevant informatio­n. Officers liaised with the Prince’s Foundation about the findings of an independen­t investigat­ion into fundraisin­g practices. The foundation provided a number of relevant documents.

“These documents were reviewed alongside existing informatio­n. The assessment determined an investigat­ion will commence. There have been no arrests or interviews under caution.”

 ?? Photograph: Vickie Flores/EPA ?? The Prince’s Foundation, Charles’s charitable body, is at the heart of a criminal enquiry.
Photograph: Vickie Flores/EPA The Prince’s Foundation, Charles’s charitable body, is at the heart of a criminal enquiry.

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