Andrew’s team ‘tried to hire trolls to hassle accuser’

Laura Elston and Josh Payne |

Police are investigation fresh allegations about Prince Andrew behaviour towards Virginia Giuffre.
Police are investigation fresh allegations about Prince Andrew behaviour towards Virginia Giuffre.

Prince Andrew’s team tried to hire internet trolls to “hassle” his accuser, Virginia Giuffre, she said in her posthumous memoir.

The allegations come as the UK’s Metropolitan Police say they are looking into claims Andrew passed Giuffre’s date of birth and social security number to his bodyguard in a bid to dig up dirt for a smear campaign.

Pressure is growing on the royal family to go further by backing a move to formally strip Andrew of his dukedom through parliamentary legislation, after he relinquished use of his Duke of York title last week.

Giuffre, in her book Nobody’s Girl, which is being published on Tuesday, described how she dressed in outfits that reminded her of her idols Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera to first meet Andrew when she was 17.

A file photo of Virginia Giuffre
Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir, Nobody’s Girl, is being published on Tuesday. (AP PHOTO)

She was pictured in the “pink V-necked, sleeveless mini T-shirt and a sparkly, multicoloured pair of jeans embroidered with a pattern of interlocking horses” in the famous photo showing the then-duke with his arm around her waist at Ghislaine Maxwell’s London flat in March 2001.

Giuffre alleged, which Prince Andrew vehemently denies, that she was forced to have sex with the prince on three occasions, including when she was 17, after being trafficked by pedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Andrew paid millions to Giuffre to settle a civil sexual assault case, despite claiming never to have met her.

Giuffre also described how he hid behind “the well-guarded gates” of Balmoral Castle, making it difficult for her lawyers to serve him with papers.

“After casting doubt on my credibility for so long – Prince Andrew’s team had even gone so far as to try to hire internet trolls to hassle me – the Duke of York owed me a meaningful apology as well,” she wrote of her 2022 legal settlement with Andrew.

“We would never get a confession, of course. That’s what settlements are designed to avoid. But we were trying for the next best thing: a general acknowledgment of what I’d been through.”

A file photo of Prince Andrew
Prince Andrew paid millions to Virginia Giuffre to settle a civil sexual assault case. (AP PHOTO)

Giuffre described how she took part in two days of mediation, and her lawyer read the duke’s agreed settlement statement at 2.30am Florida time “through tears, both hers and mine”.

Giuffre, who died by suicide in Australia in April, wrote an email to her co-writer Amy Wallace at the start of that month shortly after being involved in a car crash. She said it was her “heartfelt wish that this work be published, regardless of my circumstances at the time”, and that it was still to be released in the event of her death.

“The content of this book is crucial, as it aims to shed light on the systemic failures that allow the trafficking of vulnerable individuals across borders,” she said in the email.

“In the event of my passing, I would like to ensure that Nobody’s Girl is still released. I believe it has the potential to impact many lives and foster necessary discussions about these grave injustices,” Giuffre added.

The book also told how the prince insisted Giuffre sign a one-year gag order at the time of the settlement to prevent tarnishing the late Queen’s Platinum Jubilee.

Giuffre said Andrew’s disastrous Newsnight was like an “injection of jet fuel” for her legal team.

The Mail On Sunday reported that Andrew embarked on a bid to smear Giuffre.

He is said to have emailed the late Queen’s then-deputy press secretary Ed Perkins and told him of his request to his protection officer, and also suggested Giuffre had a criminal record.

PA