Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is seen returning after leaving police custody, following his arrest in Sandringham, Norfolk. Photo / Getty Images
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor is seen returning after leaving police custody, following his arrest in Sandringham, Norfolk. Photo / Getty Images
Britain’s royal family was thrown into crisis after former Prince Andrew was arrested by police and held for hours, in a blow to the monarchy unprecedented in modern British history.
The disgraced royal was detained early Thursday (local time) on suspicion of misconduct for his links to late US sexoffender Jeffrey Epstein.
As Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor marked his 66th birthday, police swooped on the remote Sandringham royal estate in eastern England around 8am.
King Charles III, who has promised police the full support of Buckingham Palace, swiftly issued a rare personally signed statement insisting: “The law must take its course.”
It was a humiliating new blow for Mountbatten-Windsor, who was last year stripped of his titles and ousted from his Windsor residence of more than two decades.
A statement from King Charles III via communications at Buckingham Palace pledges his "full and wholehearted support and co-operation" to the "appropriate authorities" in response to the arrest of his brother, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, on suspicion of misconduct in public office. Photo / Getty Images
Thames Valley Police said in a statement late Thursday: “The arrested man has now been released under investigation.”
A photograph published by media showed Andrew slumped in the back of a car, staring wild-eyed ahead.
While the earlier police searches in Norfolk “have now concluded”, they were still searching a property in Berkshire, police added. It is believed that is Mountbatten-Windsor’s former residence, Royal Lodge.
“It’s a hugely significant moment for the British monarchy, and indeed the nation,” royal expert Ed Owens told AFP.
“We are witnessing a monarchy, I think, shaken by recent events.”
In the sleepy village of Sandringham near the royal estate, an off-duty police officer said he was “very satisfied some formal action was taken”.
“It’s very reassuring to the members of the public,” the officer, who did not want to be named, told AFP.
Thames Valley Police said it had arrested “a man in his 60s from Norfolk on suspicion of misconduct in public office”, without naming the suspect, as is common UK practice.
US President Donald Trump called the arrest “very sad”, adding, “it’s so bad for the royal family”, in comments to reporters.
‘Moment of crisis’
Andrew’s arrest follows new revelations last week that the ex-Prince appeared to have sent Epstein potentially confidential documents while serving as a UK trade envoy, a post he held from 2001.
In a November 2010 email seen by AFP, Mountbatten-Windsor appeared to share with the US financier reports on his visit to several Asian countries.
Epstein had been convicted in the United States in 2008 of procuring a child for prostitution.
King Charles last year stripped his brother of his titles and ordered him to leave his Windsor mansion – though he does remain eighth in the line of succession.
“Let me state clearly: the law must take its course,” the King said in his statement.
In an apparent bid to project an air of business-as-usual, King Charles carried out several public duties Thursday, including opening London Fashion Week.
In the Norfolk village of Dersingham, local pub owner John Higginson said he hoped the issue would be “resolved”.
“I just feel sorry, to be quite honest, for people like William and Kate,” he added, referring to the heir-to-the-throne and his wife.
Royal commentator Katie Nicholl told Sky News: “Let’s make no bones about it. This is a moment of crisis for the monarchy, possibly the greatest crisis since the [1936] abdication. No one quite knows how this is going to pan out.”
The scandal has been gathering pace since one of Epstein’s accusers, Virginia Giuffre, last year claimed in her posthumous memoirs that she had been trafficked three times to have sex with Mountbatten-Windsor when she was a teenager.
The Giuffre family welcomed Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest, saying: “Our broken hearts have been lifted at the news.”
Wide probe
Mountbatten-Windsor has previously denied any wrongdoing in his associations with Epstein.
He settled a US civil lawsuit in 2022 brought by Giuffre while not admitting liability.
Official guidance stipulates trade envoys have a duty of confidentiality over sensitive commercial or political information related to their official visits, the BBC has said.
Misconduct in public office carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment, according to the Crown Prosecution Service.
The US Justice Department last month released millions of files from its investigation into the US financier.