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Nothing to see here, Mind how you go, sir

State-sponsored police in the UK have predictably dropped an investigation into allegations of sexual abuse against Prince Andrew, telling the British government-approved media that they the police decided not to proceed after studying a civil case filed by accuser Virginia Giuffre.

Dropping cases that could be embarrassing to the Westminster regime and ruling caste is just another peculiarity of the notorious state police operations: Operation Ore was a British police operation that commenced in 1999 following information received from US law enforcement, which was intended to prosecute thousands of users of a website reportedly featuring child pornography.

Operation Ores crackdown on organised paedophilia and child sex-trafficking and prostitution was the United Kingdom’s biggest ever computer crime investigation, leading to 7,250 suspects identified, 4,283 homes searched, 3,744 arrests, 1,848 charged, 1,451 convictions, 493 cautioned and 140 children removed from suspected dangerous situations and an estimated 33 suicides but the operation to snare paedophiles was dropped after intervention by the then Prime Minister Tony Blair.

London’s Metropolitan Police announced that it had concluded (dropped) its third review of the sexual abuse case involving Prince Andrew, and would be taking no further action.

‘As a matter of procedure MPS officers reviewed a document released in August 2021 as part of a US civil action. This review has concluded and we are taking no further action,’ the Met spokesperson said, as reported by The Sun.

The police were referring to a civil lawsuit filed by Giuffre, a US child who has accused the Duke of York of abusing her three times, including at the London home of Ghislaine Maxwell, the alleged madam of convicted sex offender Israeli-operative Jeffrey Epstein. An infamous photo showing Andrew’s arm on Giuffre’s waist was taken in the house.

School student Guiffre was 17 when she was recruited by Epstein as part of his sex trafficking operation and was trained as a sex slave by Israeli citizen Ghislaine Maxwell. 

The royal (on the ropes) has long denied that he had known Guiffre or has had sex with her, suggesting in a 2019 BBC interview that the photo of them posing together was fake.   

The Met claims it will continue to liaise with other law enforcement agencies who lead the investigation into matters related to Jeffrey Epstein, while not mentioning Prince Andrew by name.

The dropping of the investigation was announced by Met chief Cressida Dick back in August, shortly after Guiffre filed her lawsuit in New York, seeking unspecified damages from Prince Andrew for sexual assault, battery, and emotional distress. 

At the time, Cressida Dick said that while her police had already reviewed the Epstein case twice and decided not to investigate it, she asked officers to ’have another look at the material.’ ’No-one is above the law,’ the commissioner said with a straight face.

The decision by London police not to proceed with the investigation into Prince Andrew comes amid reports that Scotland Yard interviewed Guiffre about the allegation she has made in the lawsuit. The Met refuses to confirmed contacting the woman.

It comes as a New York judge gave Prince Andrew’s lawyers access to a sealed agreement struck between Epstein and Guiffre in 2009. The prince’s legal team insisted the deal prohibited Guiffre from suing anyone connected to Epstein, relieving the royal of being above the law and relieved of ‘any and all potential liability.’ Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!

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