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Age guessing game: Virginia Giuffre reveals first impressions of Prince Andrew in documentary

The Duke of York’s accuser has claimed Prince Andrew played a guessing game about her age when they first met and compared her to his daughters.

Virginia Giuffre, appearing in a new documentary series Surviving Jeffrey Epstein, says she was 17 when she was introduced to the Queen’s second son in London, and described him as an “abuser” and “not the prince from the fairy tale stories you read”.

Ms Giuffre, who says she was trafficked by pedophile financier Epstein, alleges the duke had sex with her on three separate occasions, including when she was 17, still a minor under US law.

The Prince has categorically denied he has had any form of sexual contact or relationship with Ms Giuffre.

Ms Giuffre has also made an allegation in her unpublished memoir that she and another woman were groped by the Prince when he was using a puppet from the 1980s British satirical comedy series, Spitting Image.

The duke’s friend, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, is awaiting trial in the US after being charged with procuring teenage girls for Epstein to abuse.

She denies the charges.

In a clip released ahead of the program airing, Ms Giuffre said of Andrew, who is the father of recently married Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie: “Before he abused me, when we just met, Ghislaine does this guessing game and he guessed right, I was 17 and he compared me to his daughters, saying, ‘Oh, my daughters are a few years younger than you’.”

She added: “Prince Andrew is not the prince from the fairy tale stories you read.

“Andrew deserves to be outed. He deserves to be held accountable. He’s an abuser.”

Lady Victoria Hervey, formerly friends with Andrew and Ms Maxwell, told the program that friendship with Epstein offered the duke a form of escapism.

“Jeffrey definitely enjoyed the idea of being friends with the Queen’s son and Prince Andrew had just gone through a divorce.

“There’s this American billionaire that wants to fly him around the world and introduce him to people, and it was probably an escapism, really, for him,” Hervey said.

Christopher Mason, a journalist and also a former friend of Maxwell, said he once bumped into Andrew and Ms Maxwell while walking in Madison Avenue in New York.

“He told me that he was staying at Jeffrey’s townhouse. That kind of fascinated me. It just seemed like a kind of perfect instance of the kind of people that Jeffrey was hanging out with.”

Andrew stepped down from royal public life in November following a disastrous BBC Newsnight interview, which had led to criticism of a lack of empathy for Epstein’s victims and a lack of remorse over his friendship with the convicted sex offender.

Epstein killed himself in August last year while in a New York prison awaiting trial.

-AAP

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