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Lol. I expect Andrew will be forced to quietly retire.
@taf2002 it is not a "culture." It is a worldwide human rights problem and it occurs before our very eyes every day. Educate yourself on sex trafficking before you make such ignorant comments like "she was 17, why wasn't she a virgin at home with her mom"?
Doing what?
Will the Queen strip him of his military career? That would be considered a dishonorable discharge, correct?
Ah conclusion jumping. Did you read the PR piece? Here I go again. Andrew and M/H have each made bad PR moves. And nothing has been proven about rape.
Well, the article that we all read discusses the PR woes of both Prince Andrew and the Sussexes. This does not mean that they consider "not playing nice with the press" to be equal to the alleged sexual assault of teenagers.
I would like to respectfully request that this thread title be changed to something like "Prince Andrew (and other royals) and the Epstein scandal" because "Prince Andrew" is rather vague and I keep forgetting what the thread is about and not clicking on it.![]()
At age 17 I was still a virgin so I don't think anyone could have preyed on me.
I guess I have questions because the situation is way outside of my own experiences. At age 17 I was still a virgin so I don't think anyone could have preyed on me. I was actually approached at 17 by a 40ish man & reacted with disgust & horror. I also went home & told my mother so if something had happened to me she would have had that information.
Per her own words Ms Giuffre was recruited at her place of work & apparently wanted to please Epstein & his procurer. I think most of us wouldn't have given a shit what they wanted. And she talks about dancing with Andrew in a nightclub so other people must have been around. I would have screamed bloody murder. So I just want to understand.
I think M&H are going through young, royal couple growing pains. They'll learn.
... while Archie may get that title when Charles becomes king, Harry and Meghan may also reject it, since doing without the title may make it easier for the child to fit into non-royal life.
Trump now claims he "doesn't know" Prince Andrew despite meeting with him earlier this year:
I agree. My question is was she trafficked with Jeffrey in the 1st place? Did he snatch her off the street? Did she ever tell anyone? Where were her parents? I'm not doubting that she was mistreated, I'm just saying there is still a lot of questions.
... vulnerable to the mix of sex, drugs, and money
The Vox article in post #1 included the link to Julie K. Brown's series of 3 investigative articles in the Miami Herald last year ("A decade before #MeToo, a multimillionaire sex offender from Florida got the ultimate break."): https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/article220097825.html
Human trafficking is complicated including the fact some people willingly enter into situations for various reasons. If someone wants to have better understanding of some of the complexities in identifying the trafficked person, the very large economic reasons (we're talking billions of dollars) and the structural framework that supports the process, I suggest Noel Busch-Armendariz's book Human Traffacking: Applying research, theory, and case studies. Sage Publications
You can order the book from Amazon or Barnes Nobel.
His punishment is going to be not walking with the family at Christmas? And I thought that maybe he'd do the "honorable" thing and talk to investigators.
When I read that I really hoped it was the way the reporter wrote it rather than Phillip and Charles thinking that was somehow “punishment.” The complète and total lack of empathy for what the victims have been through (regardless of whether or not Andrew was involved) is startling. That that sentence was written and got through and editor and was published. Wow.
Human trafficking is complicated including the fact some people willingly enter into situations for various reasons.
A lot of people belong in jail. Take my brother. Please!I think Andrew clearly belongs in jail.
@taf2002 this is your own words. You said at age 17 you were a virgin. You were lucky enough to be brought up in a safe supportive environment. But you can't imagine how other 17-year-olds are not brought up in those environments and would be vulnerable to the mix of sex, drugs, and money that Epstein used to lure girls to his "paradise islands" and mansions?
I honestly don't know how you can't understand this. Anyone who has ever worked in a school (in both rich and poor neighborhoods) has had to make that call to child protective services because we suspect sexual abuse going on at home, or that a parent (very often the mother) is actively pushing the daughter towards prostitution. So if you are still
"ignorant" to the "seamy" sides of life I think you just have purposely closed your eyes. I guarantee someone you know right now has been the victim of sexual abuse or is being sexually abused.
If that were true, the FBI wouldn't be investigating and want to talk to Andrew.A lot of people belong in jail. Take my brother. Please!
The alleged events happened eighteen years ago, and I would expect that the statute of limitations has run.
And her words are nothing like what you twisted them into.@taf2002 this is your own words. You said at age 17 you were a virgin. You were lucky enough to be brought up in a safe supportive environment.
Where is this case to be adjudicated?A lot of people belong in jail. Take my brother. Please!
The alleged events happened eighteen years ago, and I would expect that the statute of limitations has run.
irty-four states impose limits on when a rape case can be brought forward, ranging from 3 to 30 years after the assault. These statutes of limitations were created to ensure that evidence presented in trial has not deteriorated over time. But some crimes, such as murder or sexual abuse of a child, have been deemed too heinous to warrant any limitation. Several states have now extended that same protection to rape and sexual assault, too.
When states do pose a statue of limitations on rape cases, it varies based on the severity of the crime. Hawaii, for example, gives victims six years to prosecute charges for first-degree sexual assault but only three years for second- or third-degree. On the other end of the spectrum, the California State Assembly recently voted to repeal its 10-year limit on all felony sexual abuses. The bill still has to pass the Senate and governor before it becomes law.