She was just in her 20s, flown across the ocean by Jeffrey Epstein, expecting perhaps glamour and opportunity—only to wake up the next morning in the opulent Royal Lodge, the former Prince Andrew’s private Windsor residence, after an alleged night of sex with royalty itself.
Now, a second Epstein survivor has come forward with this bombshell claim from 2010: not only did she spend the night there, but she was then whisked to Buckingham Palace for tea and a personal tour of the iconic royal home. The shocking contrast couldn’t be starker—a night of alleged exploitation inside a prince’s home, followed by a taste of royal privilege the very next day.
Her lawyer calls it proof of Epstein’s trafficking reach straight into the heart of the monarchy. Prince Andrew has denied all wrongdoing, but this fresh accusation reignites fury and questions that refuse to fade.
What else remains hidden behind palace walls?

A second Epstein survivor has come forward with a bombshell claim that sends fresh shockwaves through the British monarchy. In 2010, the woman—then just in her early twenties and a non-British citizen—was allegedly flown across the Atlantic by Jeffrey Epstein with the explicit purpose of meeting and having sex with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the former Prince Andrew.
According to her U.S. lawyer, Brad Edwards of Edwards Henderson (a firm representing hundreds of Epstein victims), she was taken directly to Royal Lodge, Andrew’s private 30-room residence on the Windsor Castle estate. She claims she spent the night there with the Duke of York. What followed the next morning was surreal and deeply unsettling: she says she was served tea and then escorted on a personal tour of Buckingham Palace—the grand, historic seat of the British Crown, where coronations, state banquets, and the monarchy’s carefully curated image of dignity unfold.
The contrast could not be starker. One night, she alleges, she was exploited inside a secluded royal home meant for private family life; the very next day, she was treated like an honored guest, walking the same opulent corridors where kings and queens are crowned. She has described the eerie normalcy of that morning—sipping tea in surroundings of breathtaking grandeur while still processing the trauma of the night before.
Her account, first reported by the BBC and other outlets in early 2026, marks the first time an Epstein accuser has placed an alleged sexual encounter with Andrew inside a royal residence itself. Edwards told the BBC: “We’re talking about at least one woman who was sent by Jeffrey Epstein over to Prince Andrew. And she even had, after a night with Prince Andrew, a tour of Buckingham Palace.” He framed the sequence as powerful evidence of Epstein’s trafficking network reaching directly into the heart of the monarchy.
Andrew has consistently and categorically denied all allegations of sexual misconduct. He reached a civil settlement with Virginia Giuffre (who later passed away) in 2022 without admitting liability. That case, combined with mounting public pressure, led King Charles III to strip him of royal titles, military affiliations, and public duties. He is now known formally as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and has largely withdrawn from public life. Recent reports indicate he has vacated Royal Lodge amid ongoing rent disputes and scandal fallout, relocating to temporary accommodation on the Sandringham estate.
Thames Valley Police have confirmed they are assessing the new allegations in line with standard procedures for sexual offense reports. The claim has reignited calls—both in the UK and the US—for Andrew to testify under oath about his ties to Epstein. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has signaled support for greater transparency, while U.S. lawmakers and victims’ advocates continue pressing for congressional testimony.
Buckingham Palace has not addressed the specific allegation of a private tour, though visitor logs are routinely maintained. No official response has come from Andrew or his representatives regarding the latest accusation.
Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges, cultivated relationships with powerful figures across the globe. The notion that a trafficked young woman could be ushered from a royal bedroom to the palace’s state rooms raises profound questions: Who arranged such seamless access? Who knew? How many others were involved?
Behind the palace walls, the full extent of Epstein’s reach—and any potential complicity or blind spots within elite institutions—remains shrouded. Survivors continue to demand answers, while the monarchy grapples with a scandal that refuses to fade. What else remains hidden?
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