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US won’t give unredacted Epstein documents to UK police without formal request

US won’t give unredacted Epstein documents to UK police without formal request

Police investigating allegations Mandelson and former prince Andrew passed sensitive info to Epstein will struggle to make charges stick without files

British police investigating the former prince Andrew andPeter Mandelsonare preparing to start interviewing witnesses in royal and government circles.

It comes as police fear that prosecutors will be “reluctant” to bring charges unless the Trump administration agrees to hand over the original documents from the Epstein files.

The two police forces that have launched full criminal investigations as a result of revelations in the Epstein files have been in discussions with the special crime division of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), which authorises criminal charges in England and Wales.

Thames Valley police is investigatingAndrew Mountbatten-Windsor, King Charles’s brother, for misconduct in public office, over claims sensitive material was passed to Jeffrey Epstein while Mountbatten-Windsor was serving as a UK trade envoy.

The Metropolitan police is investigating Mandelson for alleged misconduct in public office over claims that, while a cabinet minister, he passed on sensitive information to Epstein.

Mandelson and Mountbatten-Windsor have both been arrested and released and are understood to deny wrongdoing.

So far, redacted documents relating to Epstein, the disgraced financier and sex offender, and his associates have been published on the US Department of Justice website.

The DoJ, seen as being under Trump’s control, has told British police it will not consider handing over the original documents without a formal request being made. That is a bureaucratic and lengthy process.

Efforts by British police – including informal requests to US officials by Met commissioner Sir Mark Rowley – to get the documents without going through a mutual legal assistance request have been unsuccessful.

The Met has now sent a formal request to the US authorities for the original and unredacted documents from the Epstein files as part of their investigation into Mandelson, the former British ambassador in Washington.

One source said: “It is difficult to make anything stick without those documents. The US could have handed them over without making [British police] go down the formal route.”

A senior source added: “It is very difficult for [CPS] to authorise prosecutions with the material as it is.” Another source said: “A lot rests on having the originals. It makes it significantly more difficult.”

Formal interviews of witnesses in royal circles and government circles are expected to start shortly as part of both criminal investigations.

For Mandelson it will be former and current senior people in government, including officials, and potentially including Gordon Brown, the former prime minister, who has already written to the Met about his concerns regarding Epstein.

Source: The Guardian