Prince Andrew accuser slams 'ridiculous excuses'
American Virginia Giuffre has alleged Jeffrey Epstein — who was found dead in a US prison in August — trafficked her to Britain when she was 17 to have sex with Britain's Prince Andrew.
An American woman who claims she was trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein to have sex with Prince Andrew criticised the royal's "ridiculous excuses" in an interview to be broadcast on Monday.
The interview was recorded before Andrew's own BBC interview, which prompted him to stand down from public duties because of a backlash over his defence of his friendship with Epstein.
But Virginia Giuffre called on the British public to support her as she dismissed claims initially made by the prince's backers that a photograph apparently showing him with his arm around her might not be genuine.
"The people on the inside are going to keep coming up with these ridiculous excuses like his arm was elongated or the photo was doctored," she told the BBC's Panorama programme.
"I'm calling BS (bullshit) on this. He knows what happened, I know what happened. And there's only one of us telling the truth," she said in clips released in advance.
Andrew himself doubted the authenticity of the photograph during his badly received interview, saying "nobody can prove whether or not that photograph has been doctored."
Giuffre has alleged she was trafficked to have sex with friends of Epstein when she was 17. Epstein was found dead in a New York prison in August awaiting sex trafficking charges.
She accused Epstein of bringing her to London in 2001, where she was introduced to Andrew and disgraced financier Epstein's socialite girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell.
She said the prince asked her for a dance at a nightclub, telling Panorama he was "the most hideous dancer I've ever seen in my life.
"His sweat was like it was raining basically everywhere," she added.
"I was just like grossed out from it but I knew I had to keep him happy because that's what Jeffrey and Ghislaine would have expected from me."
'Ill-judged' friendship
The prince told the BBC that he did not remember the photograph with Giuffre being taken.
He also said he was unable to sweat at the time due to a medical condition he developed after serving as a helicopter pilot in the Falklands War in 1982.
After the nightclub, Giuffre — then known as Roberts — said that Maxwell told her, "I have to do for Andrew what I do for Jeffrey and that just made me sick."
She and Queen Elizabeth II's second son later had sex at Maxwell's house in central London, she alleged.
Andrew, 59, said he did not remember meeting Giuffre and that he "absolutely and categorically" did not have sex with her.
Giuffre said in her interview, "I implore the people in the UK to stand up beside me, to help me fight this fight, to not accept this as being OK.
"This is not some sordid sex story. This is a story of being trafficked, this is a story of abuse and this is a story of your guys' royalty."
After his BBC interview, Andrew issue statement in which he said "I ... unequivocally regret my ill-judged association with Jeffrey Epstein" and "deeply sympathise with everyone who has been affected and wants some form of closure."
A statement from Buckingham Palace said they "emphatically denied that The Duke of York [Andrew] had any form of sexual contact or relationship with Virginia Roberts.
"Any claim to the contrary is false and without foundation," it added.