Epstein case: ex-Prince Andrew is one of the names appearing in investigations The Department of Justice of New Mexico, in the USA, reported this Wednesday (18) that the state is investigating a complaint – arising from documents released by the United States Department of Justice – that sex offender Jeffrey Epstein had ordered the bodies of two young foreign women to be buried on the outskirts of his isolated ranch in the state. New Mexico Department of Justice spokeswoman Lauren Rodriguez said the agency asked the U.S. Department of Justice for an unmarked copy of a 2019 email containing the accusation. The U.S. Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The FBI declined to comment. Release of American Justice files expose relationships between the most powerful people in the world with Jeffrey Epstein Jornal Nacional/ Reproduction READ ALSO: Ex-Prince Andrew is arrested by the UK police amid investigation into links with Epstein This Thursday (19), the crimes committed by the American financier and his connection with the ex-Prince Andrew led the brother of King Charles III to prison in the United Kingdom. The arrest comes amid investigations into possible links to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Thames Valley Police confirmed the arrest without explicitly naming Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, saying they arrested a man in his 60s on suspicion of misconduct in public office following a “thorough assessment” and with “reasonable grounds to suspect that a crime has occurred”, and are keeping the suspect in their custody. Police said they “had reasonable grounds to suspect that a crime had occurred” and that Andrew’s arrest was necessary to advance an investigation they opened against the former prince into whether he sent confidential reports to Jeffrey Epstein while serving as the UK’s special representative for International Trade. Zorro Ranch, one of Jeffrey Epstein’s properties, in an aerial view. REUTERS/Drone Base/File Photo “We are actively investigating this report and conducting a broader review in light of the most recent disclosure made by the United States Department of Justice,” Rodriguez said, in an email response to questions about the case. A day earlier, the New Mexico state Legislature launched the first comprehensive investigation into allegations that Epstein sexually abused girls and women at Zorro Ranch, about 30 miles south of Santa Fe, for more than two decades. Pressure from Democratic lawmakers to clarify Epstein’s crimes has become a relevant political challenge for President Donald Trump. The 2019 email with censored portions, included in the most recent release of Epstein-related documents by the U.S. Department of Justice, was sent a few months after the financier’s death to Eddy Aragon, a radio host in New Mexico who had discussed Zorro Ranch on his show. The sender, who claimed to be a former employee of the site, requested payment of one bitcoin in exchange for videos that, according to the email, had been taken from Epstein’s home and showed the financier having sexual relations with minors. Aragon said in a telephone interview that he considered the email legitimate and immediately forwarded it to the FBI. He stated that he had not received any payment nor maintained new contact with the sender, although he recently tried to respond for the first time — the address, however, was no longer in operation. The email, with parts redacted, stated that two young foreign women had been buried on Epstein’s orders “somewhere in the hills outside of Zorro” and that both died “from strangulation during violent, fetishistic sex.”
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United States court investigates report of bodies of two women buried near ranch that belonged to Jeffrey Epstein
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