Credit: Reuters/Issei Kato
Buckingham Palace
stepped up its denial that Prince Andrew had sex with an underage girl
introduced to him by a disgraced U.S. financier, and named the alleged
victim whose anonymity was preserved in court documents filed last week.
Buckingham Palace had already
denied on Friday allegations made in Florida court documents by the
woman, who said she was forced as a minor by financier Jeffrey Epstein
to have sex with several people, including Prince Andrew, the second son
of Queen Elizabeth.
Another of
those named by the woman, well-known American attorney Alan Dershowitz,
said he has assembled a team of "eminent" lawyers to fight the sexual
abuse allegations made against him in last week's filing in Florida
federal court.
The allegations come
from a woman who is named in the filing as Jane Doe #3, but Buckingham
Palace referred to her as Virginia Roberts. Several British newspapers
have also named the woman.
Dershowitz
represented Epstein against criminal sex abuse charges, which ended in a
plea deal six years ago under which Epstein served jail time for state
charges but avoided federal prosecution. Last week's filing was made in a
long-running civil litigation brought against the U.S. government over
the plea agreement by women who say they were abused by Epstein.
On
Sunday, Buckingham Palace issued its second denial of wrong-doing by
Prince Andrew. "It is emphatically denied that HRH The Duke of York had
any form of sexual contact or relationship with Virginia Roberts. The
allegations made are false and without any foundation," a palace
spokesman said.
Dershowitz told
Reuters that his team of attorneys included Thomas Scott, a former
Florida U.S. attorney and former federal judge, and Kendall Coffey,
another former Florida U.S. Attorney, as well as lawyers in Boston, New
York and London whom he declined to name.
He
said the allegations against him were false, and that the attorneys who
filed them - Florida attorney Brad Edwards and University of Utah law
professor Paul Cassell - knew they were false.
Dershowitz,
a Harvard University professor emeritus, said he planned to file
complaints with the attorney disciplinary boards of Florida and Utah
seeking to have them disbarred. Knowingly making false court filings is
grounds for disbarment in both states.
Dershowitz
also said he would file a motion to join in the Florida civil action,
by making a sworn statement in Florida federal court denying the
charges.
He said the allegations
against him were especially unfair because they were made in a court
case where he was not a party, so that he had no chance to respond
directly.
"It's like Josef K in
Kafka," he said. "The difference is that Josef K lost. In the end I will
prevail. They took on the wrong innocent person."
Edwards and Cassell said in a joint statement that they looked forward to Dershowitz's filing.
"It
is not unethical to provide legal representation to the victim of
international sex trafficking ring and to believe in the allegations
such a victim makes – even when those allegations are made against
powerful people," they said.
Buckingham Palace also denied on Sunday that the Queen had met Virginia Roberts.
The
woman's father, Sky Roberts, was quoted by the Daily Mail as saying
that his daughter had been introduced to the Queen while visiting London
with Epstein.
When asked about
this, a palace spokesman said: "there is nothing to suggest that this
claim is true. We have no record of such a meeting."
On
Saturday, some British newspapers published an old photograph of Prince
Andrew holding the waist of the woman, then aged 17. The age of consent
is 16 in Britain, but it is 18 in much of the United States.
People making a criminal complaint of rape in England have a legal right to anonymity unless they choose to waive it.
By Reuter
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