ANDREW’S links to a second convicted sex offender have been thrust back into the spotlight after newly released Epstein files revealed US investigators wanted to question him about jailed fashion tycoon Peter Nygard.
Documents show US authorities formally applied to the Home Office to invoke a legal treaty with Britain to interview the disgraced royal over his associations with both Jeffrey Epstein and Nygard.
The request, made under the 1994 Treaty of Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters between the US and UK, asked for Andrew to be questioned about his relationships, travel and communications with Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell – and separately, Nygard.
US officials also demanded the request be kept confidential to protect their investigation.
As part of the Epstein probe, American investigators sought all communications between Andrew and Epstein, including emails, texts, voicemails and any written notes of oral conversations.
An attachment listed 12 topic areas they wanted to quiz him on, including his relationship with Epstein and Maxwell, trips taken with them, payments made, and the identities of women he met through the pair.
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They also wanted to ask about any sexual contact or relationships Andrew may have had with people he allegedly met via Epstein and Maxwell.
Separately, the files show US authorities wanted to interview Andrew about his links to Nygard, now 84, a Finnish-born Canadian fashion mogul who was sentenced to 11 years in prison in Toronto in 2024 for sexually assaulting four women between the late 1980s and 2005.
The latest batch of documents, released by the US Department of Justice, includes a letter sent by the FBI to British authorities in April 2020 as part of its investigation into Nygard.
The letter states that evidence linked Andrew to both Epstein and Nygard in two separate sex-trafficking investigations, although it stressed he was not a target of either probe.
“The investigation has revealed that, on at least one occasion, Prince Andrew travelled to Nygard Cay in the Bahamas, a location where Nygard is believed to have trafficked minor and adult female victims,” the document reads.
Investigators wanted to know whether Andrew had seen any girls under 18 at the property and, if so, whether he knew their names.
The FBI said that if Andrew declined a voluntary interview, UK authorities could be asked to “conduct a compelled interview of the witness under oath”.
Like Epstein, Nygard owned a lavish Caribbean estate and was accused by multiple women of trafficking and sexually abusing young girls and women there.
He has denied all allegations of child sex abuse.
Andrew was photographed holidaying with Nygard at the tycoon’s Bahamas estate in 2000.
Another image shows Nygard with Andrew’s former wife Sarah Ferguson and their two daughters, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie.
The visit took place around Andrew’s 40th birthday, shortly after Nygard reached out-of-court settlements with three former female employees over sexual harassment claims.
During sentencing last year, Justice Robert Goldstein described Nygard as a “sexual predator”, adding that he was a “Canadian success story gone very wrong”.
The judge said the self-made multimillionaire used his wealth and influence to groom victims and showed no empathy, noting that one victim was just 16 at the time of the assault.
Nygard faces further sex trafficking and sexual assault charges in Montreal, Winnipeg and the United States.
Some American charges have yet to be tested in court.
Andrew has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and has previously said he regrets his association with Epstein.