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Met commissioner says investigations into Epstein files show ‘no one is above the law’ | UK News

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Police investigations into the Epstein files send the “right message” that “no one is above the law”, the Metropolitan Police commissioner has told Sky News.

In a wide-ranging interview about violence against women and girls (VAWG) marking five years since the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving officer, Sir Mark Rowley said “it helps take the agenda forward because so much sexual offending is about power”.

“I think it’s been very clear that regardless of your power, regardless of position, you’ll be confronted if you’re a sexual offender”, he said.

Nine UK police forces, including the Met, have launched inquiries relating to tens of thousands of documents released by the US justice department, connected to the convicted paedophile and financier Jeffrey Epstein.

Asked about the prospect of investigating ‘without fear or favour’ royal protection officers who worked with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the commissioner told Sky News “wherever offending sits, we will go after it”.

The Met previously announced that it had asked former and serving officers who may have worked with Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to ‘consider carefully whether anything they saw or heard during that period of service may be relevant’ to their reviews. There is no suggestion of wrongdoing on either the part of the officers or Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

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Mollie Malone with Sir Mark Rowley
Image:
Mollie Malone with Sir Mark Rowley

The force is also assessing information regarding suggestions that London airports may have been used to facilitate trafficking and sexual exploitation.

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested by a different police force, Thames Valley Police, relating to alleged misconduct in a public office. Being featured in the Epstein files does not imply any wrongdoing.

Helen Millichap, the national police lead for VAWG, told Sky News it is her “important task” to “make sure we don’t look away from this moment and our outrage.”

She added: “There is genuine outrage in society, and specifically outrage which is changing police culture”, she said, as part of a wider interview discussing police culture.

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