In a bombshell that rocks the British monarchy yet again, historian Andrew Lownie’s gripping unauthorized biography “Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York” uncovers explosive details about Prince Andrew’s deep, decade-long ties to Jeffrey Epstein—far earlier, longer, and more intimate than the disgraced royal ever admitted. Drawing on four years of research and over 100 new interviews, Lownie reveals Andrew and ex-wife Sarah Ferguson knew Epstein since the early 1990s, portrays the prince as Epstein’s “useful idiot” granting prestige while being exploited, alleges an on-and-off affair with Ghislaine Maxwell who reinvented his image and drew him deeper into the web, recounts cocaine-fueled hotel nights with young girls, sex toys left in guest rooms, and claims Epstein peddled Andrew’s intimate secrets to foreign intelligence agencies like Mossad, Saudi Arabia, and Libya. With fresh Epstein files unsealing this month amid ongoing Transparency Act disclosures, survivors and critics demand answers: How much did the palace cover up—and will these revelations finally end Andrew’s lingering protection?

Published in August 2025, “Entitled” has ignited global fury, topping bestseller lists while painting Andrew as arrogant, sex-obsessed, and rudderless post-Navy. Lownie details Maxwell’s role as Andrew’s “occasional lover” since the 1980s, managing his wardrobe, social life, and even brokering deals like tobacco in Malawi. Witnesses describe Andrew as a “mainstay” at Epstein’s properties, with drivers recalling pickups of young women doing drugs en route to hotels, and housekeepers finding lingerie stockpiles. Epstein reportedly viewed Andrew as his “Super Bowl trophy,” shocked even by the prince’s appetites while gathering compromising material for potential blackmail or sale to spies.
The book challenges Andrew’s timeline, insisting contacts predated 1999, and exposes palace efforts to shield him despite warnings. Andrew settled Virginia Giuffre’s allegations in 2022 without admission, but Lownie amplifies survivor voices amid December’s grand jury unsealing—promising flight logs, videos, and more. Critics hail it as the “most devastating royal biography,” fueling calls to strip remaining privileges. As King Charles distances the Firm, Lownie warns more damaging material looms. In an era of reckoning, “Entitled” poses the ultimate question: Can monarchy survive when entitlement meets impunity?
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