Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor arrested and in custody on suspicion of misconduct in public office (www.bbc.com)
from fiat_lux@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 10:22
https://lemmy.world/post/43322624

Summary
Police say King Charles’s brother is in custody and officers are carrying out searches at addresses in Berkshire and Norfolk - read the police statement in full

#world

threaded - newest

thehatfox@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 10:45 next collapse

As a British person that’s something I thought I’d never see.

Arrested on his birthday too.

fiat_lux@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 11:00 next collapse

I’m not British but I’m also very surprised. I can’t help but wonder if they would have dared had he still had his title?

on his birthday too.

The cops took the phrase “the icing on the cake” literally, and I think it was an excellent choice.

gnutrino@programming.dev on 19 Feb 11:15 next collapse

I can’t help but wonder if they would have dared had he still had his title?

I would assume that the king and other interested parties will have known this was coming for a while and that is why he lost his title.

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:17 next collapse

Charles has always hated and envied Andrew. He removed him from Royal duties as soon as he had the power to do so.

Rothe@piefed.social on 19 Feb 11:38 collapse

What did he envy him for?

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:44 collapse

Charles has a complex that his parents never loved him, and merely bred him to be Sovereign. It’s why he still refuses to move in to Buckingham Palace. Andrew was unquestionably Elizabeth’s favourite child, with his frequent failures and bankruptcies excused and waved away.

Meanwhile, Charles believes he was forced into an arranged marriage, and when that failed he was forbidden to marry the person he had always loved, with the Queen even refusing to be in the same building for a long time, despite the requirement for an heir and a spare already having been settled.

Andrew was allowed to saddle the family with Fergie without consequence. But Fergie is an entertaining grifter, while Camilla is known as the “laziest woman in England” by her friends, so it’s not surprising she never got on with someone so duty-bound as Elizabeth.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 12:56 collapse

You do not know these people. This is knitting circle talk. Charles removed Andrew because of Epstein and other local infractions, as well as knowledge of him sharing state secrets.

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 13:58 collapse

This is detailed in Tom Bower’s thoroughly researched book.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 16:32 collapse

Again, hearsay and a book designed to sell books.

fiat_lux@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 11:28 collapse

Maybe, I’m not so sure. I had thought they knew it was very likely the accusations were true, but they spent a lot of time sidestepping action. If public criticism hadn’t been so relentless, they might have been content to sweep it under the rug, as is tradition.

But I have never kept close track of the royal family, largely because I always assumed they were untouchable.

gnutrino@programming.dev on 19 Feb 12:11 collapse

they spent a lot of time sidestepping action

That’s sort of my point though, they spent years protecting him and then suddenly a few months ago something made them turn on a dime and strip him of his titles very rapidly. I suspect that “something” was being told the police had enough evidence to arrest him.

DagwoodIII@piefed.social on 19 Feb 13:03 next collapse

Someone asked Ernest Hemingway how he lost all his money.

“Gradually, then all at once.”

Same situation. One person says something and it’s dismissed. Ten people say it and it becomes gossip fodder. A hundred people say it and it becomes an open secret. A million people say it and he gets arrested.

hector@lemmy.today on 19 Feb 13:22 next collapse

I wonder if the one that defected with his wife to california had something to do with all of this too, and not just snobbery to his new wife.

greygore@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:25 collapse

I would assume that he’d have more cover as a royal in the UK than as an immigrant in the US. Unless you were saying that he left the royal family in disgust for doing things like cleaning up for Andrew for so long, which I realize now was probably what you intended, but I’ll post this anyway in case someone else gets confused too.

fiat_lux@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:24 collapse

That’s fair. At the time I thought it might be because they were struggling to deal with both the Andrew situation and the Harry drama simultaneously, while Charles was generally more unpopular than his mother, and likely ill.

But if they privately found out something that made the Andrew situation untenable, it makes sense that they would try to distance that ASAP. I wonder whether it’s something that has been released already or is even worse.

Charles’ statement today on “we support the police”, plus letting them search The Lodge, definitely feels like they’re leaving him to rot. At least maybe a little.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 12:54 collapse

The law wanted to send a clear message, just 25 years too late.

Nighed@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:10 next collapse

The late queen’s protection of him was a blemish on her record. I’m happy the king has cut him loose to face consequences… I wonder if they asked him before the arrest…

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:13 next collapse

Almost certainly; Andrew lives on Charles’ private estate.

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.wtf on 19 Feb 13:39 collapse

They didn’t.

“The Press Association is reporting that neither King Charles nor Buckingham Palace was informed in advance of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest.”

theguardian.com/…/police-arrest-former-prince-and…

arrow74@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 14:22 collapse

That’s an interesting development then. Nothing stopping the king from issuing a pardon

idiomaddict@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 14:29 next collapse

I mean…

I have to assume thr relatively precarious position the royals have is stopping him

arrow74@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 14:32 collapse

It’s the continual back and forth they’ve had for the last several centuries.

They don’t want to lose more power or come off as weak, but they also don’t want to wield too much power and be removed.

idiomaddict@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 16:33 collapse

Yeah. I think throwing his brother under the bus would probably earn the king a whole lot of goodwill with the public, whereas pardoning him would outrage people.

Though not much came of Jimmy Saville, but Andrew’s not dead

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 15:37 next collapse

Uh, yeah there is. It needs to be recommended by ministers.

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.wtf on 19 Feb 16:08 next collapse

He can’t do that.

arrow74@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 16:12 collapse

No the King has that power. It is exercised today under the guidance of other officials, but the King can still use the power without reccomendation.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_prerogative_of_mercy

It is crazy how much power the UK monarchs still have. They choose not to exercise it often, but the option remains.

So I dove into the law a bit more and the King must follow the ministers reccomendation when asked to pardon, but there is no indication that the King is limited on his ability to use this mechanism.

However parliment can then check it if they so choose.

Feel free to correct me though, it’s complicated text and I may be mistaken

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.wtf on 19 Feb 16:27 collapse

The convention is that the royal family don’t use these powers unilaterally. There’s an unspoken agreement here that they get to keep their palaces and fancy lifestyle on the understanding that they keep out of politics and legal issues so while Charlie could in theory do something like this, he also knows that if he did, it would pretty much signal the end of the monarchy in the UK.

WildPalmTree@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 16:48 collapse

Conventions. That’s what kept the US somewhat sane, until it didn’t. How is that going again?

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.wtf on 19 Feb 16:50 collapse

Yes, looking at the reaction to the Epstein fallout around the world, the US is an outlier.

arrow74@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 17:08 collapse

We remember the whole Brexit fiasco and well Boris Johnson in general.

No democracy should rely on good faith in its legal code

IchNichtenLichten@lemmy.wtf on 19 Feb 17:11 collapse

Yet to varying extents, they all do.

arrow74@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 17:26 collapse

I don’t know how that negates the issue. It’s still an issue even if everyone else does it.

Depress_Mode@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 17:49 next collapse

Charles also said something like “the law must take its course” in reaction to the news, so I think he might just let it play out

greygore@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:19 collapse

On June 6, ABC News’ David Muir asked Joe Biden, “Have you ruled out a pardon for your son?” Biden responded, “Yes.”

A week later, Biden reiterated to reporters during an international summit that “I will not pardon him,” nor commute his sentence, a lesser action that would have reduced Hunter Biden’s sentence but not lifted his conviction.

(source)

Not saying Charles will do an about face like Biden, nor will I say that he’s not just throwing Andrew under the bus to avoid additional fallout, but let’s see what he does if/when Andrew faces real consequences.

CannonFodder@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 20:38 collapse

Yeah, sucks that Biden had to do that. But he clearly saw how trump was going to weaponise the doj. They were already reneging on the plea deal that Biden jr had made.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 18:58 collapse

The charge is sharing goverment documents. The penalty is a fine.

fiat_lux@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 20:54 collapse

Where are you hearing that? The charge is misconduct in public office, and while the initial arrest for it has been made based on sharing documents, the penalty itself can have a maximum of life in prison. Life in prison won’t happen, but given they’ve now searched 4 properties, I don’t think he’s getting away with just a fine either.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 12:53 next collapse

Blame Queen Elizabeth. She was more interested in preserving the monarchy than Andrew’s victims. There has to be a better way to promote tourism.

BrightCandle@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 14:35 next collapse

Got to have a couple of examples of the rich and powerful going away for their crimes so the plebs don’t realise how stacked against them the system really is.

KneeTitts@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 14:51 next collapse

Arrested on his birthday too

surprise muthafucka

a_non_monotonic_function@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 19:04 next collapse

As an American citizen I’m wildly jealous.

The evidence is right there and we’re the only ones that don’t seem to give a s***.

FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 20:33 collapse

Arrested on his birthday too.

Love seeing this creep go down.

Old_Jimmy_Twodicks@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 10:46 next collapse

I wonder if this walking pile of stale bread is sweating now.

Kraiden@piefed.social on 19 Feb 10:52 next collapse

over the alleged sharing of confidential material by the former prince with late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein

Really? Not because he’s a sex offender himself maybe? I’m happy to see an arrest, but fucking really!?

determinist@kbin.earth on 19 Feb 10:55 next collapse

CPS generally charges what they can reasonably prove.

*and since he's high profile I expect (hope) they aren't going to fuck it up. get him for something like this, maybe it opens the doors to further charges. Anyway, living in hope.

dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de on 19 Feb 10:56 next collapse

That was probably the best angle to start an in-depth investigation into his dealings with Epstein. Evidence that comes to light during that investigation can still be used for additional charges.

Kraiden@piefed.social on 19 Feb 11:41 next collapse

Max sentence is life imprisonment, so I guess I shouldn’t look a gift horse in the mouth, but it would still be nice to call a spade a spade… and other idioms

KoboldCoterie@pawb.social on 19 Feb 11:48 collapse

Might be a matter of what they can prove definitively. Better to hit him with a charge they know will stick than one that he has a chance to wiggle out from.

Mirshe@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 12:09 collapse

They got Capone on tax evasion, etc.

fiat_lux@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 11:02 next collapse

They probably have to start small, it’s unprecedented territory, and they’d want the proper charges to stick. I expect this also opens up the door to evidence gathering for the bigger charges.

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 11:10 next collapse

Across the pond, whenever they’d get a big Mafia don, usually it wasn’t because of all the bodies in the river wearing concrete shoes. Usually, it was due to unpaid taxes or some white-collar bullshit. I guess they take what they can get?

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:12 next collapse

There has been a significant development in that case, so that’s what they’re investigating.

ClownStatue@piefed.social on 19 Feb 11:38 next collapse

Unfortunately, I fear most of the fallout from this will be that we “know” what some people did, but few will actually be held legally responsible. There’s the bar of proof that satisfies the public (the “sniff test?”), and what’s required for a conviction in court. In the end, any punishment is better than none. One up side could be that, because of what the public “knows” happened, those that are punished will hopefully be unlikely to see any lenience in sentencing. Not hopeful after seeing Maxwell’s treatment, but early days.

FishFace@piefed.social on 19 Feb 12:49 next collapse

Because even in the Epstein files most people aren’t saying “ay Jeff, cheers for the fifteen year-old lasses we all shagged, see you next time,” but they are saying “here are the minutes of the cabinet meeting/this is what the prime minister thinks about regulating your company/this is the most he’s willing to give you a tax break for” in emails because that stuff had to be communicated somehow.

We can all see that Andrew probably committed some sex crimes. But being a suspicious creepy fucker, being accused, and having a photo of you crouching over a girl would not be enough evidence to get you or me charged with a crime either. The counterweight to “nobody is above the law” is “nobody shall be convicted except on the evidence.”

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 12:59 collapse

Yes, sadly, this will be about selling state secrets, not pedophilia. Of course, Trump did the same thing out of Maralago.

FishFace@piefed.social on 19 Feb 13:07 collapse

It’s sad that all too often there is insufficient evidence to charge people with sexual crimes, but he’s being charged with a very serious crime for which there apparently is sufficient evidence. It’s no competition, but betraying your country causes small amounts of harm to millions of people, which is not less important than causing extreme harm to a small number of people.

hector@lemmy.today on 19 Feb 13:27 collapse

We can hope Mandelson is next, he shared information with Epstein too if I recall.

They never go down for their worst crimes. Usually they are guilty of horrible things, killing people with greed and knowing lies, but get taken down with sex scandals. So when it’s an actual sex scandal I’m not surprised it’s some other thing.

I think because other connected people don’t want to be implicated, so they make sure the person is convicted on something unrelated and use their influence to keep the charges off the larger issue perhaps. Never more true than with this case, they are all implicated. Who is they? Every swell in the US and UK apparently. Just presume anyone in the US that went to the ivy league and was in a private club hung out with epstein. (Private clubs started after civil rights triumphed, when they had to start taking in deserving poor and minorities, they started the clubs to differentiate between the aristocracy that almost exclusively runs our business and government, and the dirty charity cases.)

Diplomjodler3@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 10:57 next collapse

The nonce formerly known as prince facing justice? Wow. I’m looking out of the window right now waiting for the pigs to fly by.

Kraiden@piefed.social on 19 Feb 11:49 next collapse

there’s something clever in there, I can feel it… something something the difference between a nonce and a prince is PR… i…

needs work

Remember_the_tooth@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 11:54 collapse

What concerns me more is preparing to deal with the monkeys that will be coming out of my butt.

Cherry@piefed.social on 19 Feb 10:59 next collapse

Good! I hope this just isn’t for appearances.

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:06 collapse

This would have to be absolutely fucking airtight to even be contemplated.

Cherry@piefed.social on 19 Feb 11:30 collapse

Very true.

Eiri@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 11:09 next collapse

He’s only 66?! Damn, he looks 80.

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:14 next collapse

The Falklands war took a heavy toll on his physical and mental health.

One of his jobs as chopper pilot was to hover near ships, to use himself as a decoy to lure away heatseeker missiles. Enough to age anyone.

greyscale@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Feb 12:39 collapse

He’s been holding all that sweat in, makes you get puffy and age faster.

furzegulo@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Feb 11:18 next collapse

Let’s hope Charles locks him up in the Tower and throws the key into Thames

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 11:57 collapse

The final prisoners at the Tower were the Kray twins in 1952.

mkwt@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 13:48 collapse

I’d be on board with reactivating the Tower.

ageedizzle@piefed.ca on 19 Feb 11:40 next collapse

Assuming he hasn’t destroyed the evidence, this could potentially lead to more arrests once police search his laptop and read his texts messages and emails.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 13:00 collapse

It’s all in the Epstein files. He exchanged state secrets for favors.

ageedizzle@piefed.ca on 19 Feb 13:03 collapse

Yes. But it will be interesting to see if anyone else is implicated once they examine Andrew’s online accounts 

varnia@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 19 Feb 11:47 next collapse

This should put enough pressure for Trump to be next, right my US American fiends?

Cherry@piefed.social on 19 Feb 12:36 next collapse

I think you play by different rules. The more mentioned points system means you get more protection in your version.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 12:57 next collapse

You have to start by removing his title.

KneeTitts@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 14:54 next collapse

trump/fElon should both be in prison right now, but I dont see it happening

village604@adultswim.fan on 19 Feb 15:51 collapse

Lol, no. Trump isn’t going to be prosecuted for mishandling government documents. Again.

WanderWisley@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 12:03 next collapse

As an American I find this confusing to arrest a rich, powerful person on criminal charges.

FenrirIII@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 13:50 next collapse

Especially a rich white person

KneeTitts@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 14:51 next collapse

trump/fElon next please

andallthat@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 17:56 collapse

A rich, white, pedophile! Arrested. Have they no respect? What will they do next… tax them?

TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 21:40 collapse

Because the other rich powerful cunts already decided they don’t care about him

TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 12:42 next collapse

Well, fair play to the current royal house. Prince Charles (he’ll always be a prince to me) upholds the liberal values and accountability since his grandfather’s time.

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 15:43 collapse

This must be some other Charles

Berengaria_of_Navarre@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 12:54 next collapse

Hah hah! Happy birthday, nonce!

hector@lemmy.today on 19 Feb 13:17 next collapse

Hang the childfuckers high! As per law with due process obviously, and yes I know they don’t have the death penalty which I do not support generally because we can’t trust authorities to get the right people let alone to decide who should be executed.

Still though, send this guy to like a penal colony on some island north of scotland or something, building sea bird habitat on bread and water rations.

dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de on 19 Feb 15:15 collapse

He been arrested for misconduct whilst in public office, so not for being a nonce. It’s for sharing information.

hector@lemmy.today on 19 Feb 15:26 next collapse

For sharing information about adults fucking children?

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 15:35 collapse

No

PhoenixDog@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 16:23 collapse

They can lay additional charges later. This just gets him in the system.

myfunnyaccountname@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 13:21 next collapse

There is more happening on a global level from the findings in the Epstein files then there is in the US. The US just gets tweets and soundbites on the news. The US is a joke.

MunkyNutts@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 15:22 next collapse

Sadly, as I understood from a report I saw this morning, it’s not in connection to his pedophilia but to sending highly sensitive gov docs to Epstein which may have been used for financial gain.

FreshParsnip@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 16:03 next collapse

But at least he’s been arrested for something

davepleasebehave@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 17:59 next collapse

which still comes from the Epstein files right?

greygore@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:09 collapse

And they arrested and imprisoned Al Capone for tax evasion. The important part is they arrested him, and secondly that it was for something related to Epstein. Hopefully the ensuing investigation will cause more details to be revealed and a wider reckoning to occur, but either way, he’s no longer free.

NGC2346@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 15:47 next collapse

Always has been

Gammelfisch@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 21:34 collapse

Especially when the US justice system nailed Bill Cosby and Harvey Weinstein with fewer adult(?) victims.

letraset@piefed.dk on 19 Feb 14:03 next collapse

Andrew, the consequences of your actions are knocking on your door came to visit you on your birthday.

FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 14:04 next collapse

HOLY CRAP IT’S REAL.

I didn’t believe it when I first saw it. FUCKING AWESOME.

lechekaflan@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 14:41 next collapse

Republicanists (no relation to the rotten GOP) are going to have a field day today.

It’s on the Beeb. Full throttle. inv.nadeko.net/watch?v=M5I5ATQy6zk

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 15:35 collapse

It does somewhat undermine their claims that the Royals are above the law

Zanshi@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 16:59 next collapse

I think it helps that his mother, of whom he was the favourite child is dead and can’t protect him anymore.

Corporal_Punishment@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 17:39 next collapse

Charles is. The CPS prosecutes in his name.

None of the others are though.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 17:57 collapse

Andrew is not a royal. Charles had to remove his title.

ohulancutash@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 18:18 collapse

Thats seperate. Only the Sovereign is “above the law” and that in effect just means Parliament would hold the trial rather than the judiciary.

scarabic@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 15:48 next collapse

Finally! An arrest!

D_C@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 17:52 collapse

Meanwhile in america: {crickets, followed by a tumbleweed blowing across a sand covered road}

And that’s after the obese orange child rapist was best friends with Epstein for decades, and has been mentioned many thousands of times, with thousands of pictures, and numerous sexual accusations all in the Epstein files.
The fat cunt could shoot a baby live on TV and no fucker would do a thing about it.

scarabic@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:03 next collapse

It’s incredibly conspicuous that Trump hasn’t arrested anyone over this. He’ll take any opportunity to persecute his perceived enemies, and plenty of them are in the files. He sues people over absolutely nothing. It’s weird that not one prosecution has gone down. He’ll probably even pardon Maxwell.

Dwayne_Elizondo_Mountain_Dew_Camacho@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 19:33 collapse

Yeah, but have you considered the Dow? The Dow is at 50$… or something.

CircaV@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 15:50 next collapse

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

FreshParsnip@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 16:03 next collapse

Justice!

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 16:30 collapse

Not exactly, the arrest is about stealing and sharing state secrets, not the children he raped.

FreshParsnip@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 17:04 next collapse

At least it’s something. At least it shows someone rich and powerful can be held accountable for crimes

greenbit@lemmy.zip on 19 Feb 18:27 collapse

They’ve chosen the fall guy

Grimtuck@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 17:44 collapse

While it’s true and that’s what they’re investigating, they’re searching his devices and his properties and they can prosecute on anything they find.

Hell of a lot more than most people expected.

Brummbaer@pawb.social on 19 Feb 16:08 next collapse

I don’t get it, what public office does he hold and was he elected?

pi3r8@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 16:10 collapse

He was a trade envoy for the uk.

Brummbaer@pawb.social on 19 Feb 16:12 collapse

Makes sense in a way, but still weird giving royal families any public office because they are royal.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 17:56 next collapse

US appoints all kinds of people to government senior roles no one would elect.

greygore@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:11 next collapse

Think of the royals like vestigial organs - they still exist and do something, but your body won’t really miss them if they’re removed.

BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 22:06 collapse

Kind of a half decent use for them if you think about it, they’re probably quite good on etiquette and come with a certain cachet regardless of what we may think.

robocall@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 16:35 next collapse

The grand old Duke of York

he had 12 million quid

He gave it to someone he’d never met

for something he never did

davetortoise@reddthat.com on 19 Feb 18:12 collapse

Well actually it was the taxpayer that had 12 million quid, then gave it to a sweaty nonce for some ungodly reason

IAmNorRealTakeYourMeds@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:38 next collapse

glad the queen is rotting in hell

ayyy@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 21:29 collapse

But tourism or something

Hyaline_Cat@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 17:57 next collapse

Funny how I knew it wasn’t in America not because of the name, but because someone in public office went into custody.

7101334@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:21 next collapse

He’s being arrested for sharing official documents. Not the disgusting crimes he committed against children and/or women. It’s not real accountability, it’s theater meant to placate the angry masses.

ameancow@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:45 next collapse

theater meant to placate the angry masses

Thousands of years into our civilization and the oldest tricks still work the best. The more things change and all that.

edit: that said, Epstein was almost definitely working as a double-agent between various organizations, maybe a quadruple agent or more, he wasn’t so well-connected and powerful just because he dealt children, he also dealt secrets between superpowers, so just having contact with him as a state official puts a massive spotlight on you as a security risk.

National governments care a lot more about you being a security risk than they do about you hurting kids.

SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca on 19 Feb 18:57 next collapse

The penalty is mostly fines. Even sharing military secrets in UK is only 2 years. WTF Brits.

duncan_bayne@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 22:11 collapse

OTOH - consider the plight of Manning and Snowden. Perhaps a penalty of 2 years would encourage whistleblowers?

WhiskyTangoFoxtrot@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 20:14 next collapse

Trump had crates full of official documents in his bathroom and nobody touched him in four years.

crapwittyname@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 20:39 next collapse

I read some analysis on this in the guardian, it predicted this would happen, because the police have limited resources and can only follow up one of the two charges. This charge is chosen because there is far more likely to be incontrovertible evidence, probably in the form of paper trails etc. Whereas proving he raped children decades ago relies on witness testimony, which is far easier for his very expensive (taxpayer-funded, mind) lawyers to talk down in court.
If this cunt sees a single day in prison I call that a win.

BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk on 19 Feb 21:52 collapse

It’s likely all they have sufficient evidence to charge him with in their jurisdiction.

ayyy@sh.itjust.works on 19 Feb 21:27 collapse

Many Democrats have been arrested. The fascist political persecution is already in full swing.

Mulligrubs@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 21:35 collapse

Oh, I see, it’s funny because it’s not true! Ha ha! Ohhhhh

Paranoidfactoid@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 18:30 next collapse

I wonder if he’s finally sweating now.

Mulligrubs@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 20:31 next collapse

I did not expect this.

Sadly, this proves that even the infamously evil ROYAL FAMILY has more integrity than Trump and our politicians (including Democrats).

Which is fucking terrifying, really. Brace yourselves, keep your chin up, and all of that

kandoh@reddthat.com on 19 Feb 20:43 collapse

Someone on bluesky said that SCOTUS has made American presidents less accountable than British monarchs

Mulligrubs@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 21:33 collapse

I cannot disagree! We can see the effects of “corporations are people” and “money is free speech” all around us.

Every year the corporate dystopia gets more obscene.

Gammelfisch@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 21:36 next collapse

Perhaps King Charles has had enough of his sick fuck brother. Slow castration with hot oil is in order and since the UK does not have the death penalty, a dungeon with public viewing is in order.

Snowclone@lemmy.world on 19 Feb 21:39 next collapse

I wsn’t expecting to develop begrudging respect for England today.

arcine@jlai.lu on 19 Feb 22:02 collapse

Truly, the most noble in name are not the most noble of heart.