The convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein admitted that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor arranged for his private plane to land at an RAF base at RAF Marham, near the Royal Family’s Sandringham Estate in Norfolk.
The newly released email exchange is part of the three million documents published as part of the Epstein files. Emails dated days before the story was published show that a Telegraph correspondent asked Epstein’s public relations manager, Thomas Mulligan, of the New York firm Sitrick and Company, how the Gulfstream was allowed to land at Marham after the journalist obtained flight logs.
The PR wrote: “Did anyone – namely Prince Andrew – help him get permission?” This email was forwarded to Ghislaine Maxwell, who replied: “I think that’s crap and not true and you should say So.” Epstein then responded “just spoke to larry,,, its true” [sic] to which Maxwell replied “S—“.
The Telegraph reports Epstein’s lawyers wrote in the following week to complain about “exaggerated reporting”, while claiming that Epstein was not a paedophile because “the girls in question were not pre-pubescent” and that the word itself “has a very specific medical definition”.
Flight logs obtained by The Telegraph in 2011 show that Epstein’s personal Gulfstream business jet, registered N908JE, flew from Paris Le Bourget to London Luton on December 6, 2000.
The following day, it made the 80-mile hop from Luton to RAF Marham. Epstein and Maxwell stayed at Sandringham as guests of Andrew before leaving the UK on December 9 from Norwich International Airport.
The Telegraph also reports that the Ministry of Defence claimed at the time that Epstein had been given no special treatment and that civil aircraft were “routinely” allowed to land at Marham.
The Justice Department released more than 3 million pages of files related to the investigation into Jeffrey Epstein.
Included in the document dump are images that appear to show Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor (then styled Prince Andrew) kneeling on all fours over a woman lying on the ground.
Andrew has previously denied all wrongdoing.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.express.co.uk ’














