Thursday, February 19, 2026

Former Prince Andrew arrested following Epstein files revelations

 https://www.nbcnews.com/world/united-kingdom/former-prince-andrew-arrested-epstein-files-revelations-rcna259691

 

Former Prince Andrew arrested following Epstein files revelations

Former Prince Andrew arrested following Epstein files revelations

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on his birthday Thursday on suspicion of misconduct in public office.
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LONDON — Police arrested the former Prince Andrew on Thursday on suspicion of misconduct while in office, following weeks of new revelations over his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

The stunning development marks the first arrest of a member of the royal family in centuries and makes him the most high-profile figure to face criminal accusations in a scandal that continues to sweep in some of the world’s richest and most powerful.

The arrest comes after a remarkable fall from grace for the brother of King Charles III, who was stripped of his titles last year and is now known only as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor — and is yet another blow to Britain's already beleaguered royal family. The king expressed his “deepest concern” at the news Thursday and stressed that “the law must take its course.”

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Mountbatten-Windsor, who turned 66 on Thursday, has always denied any wrongdoing in connection with Epstein.

The Thames Valley Police said in a statement early Thursday it had arrested a man in his 60s on suspicion of misconduct in public office, which carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment in the United Kingdom.

Police vehicles near the residence of Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor on the Sandringham estate on Feb. 19, 2026.
Police vehicles near Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor's residence on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, east England, on Thursday.Bav Media

The police force, which covers an area in southern England where Mountbatten-Windsor used to live, did not name him, as is standard practice under British law.

“We understand the significant public interest in this case, and we will provide updates at the appropriate time,” Assistant Chief Constable Oliver Wright said. “Following a thorough assessment, we have now opened an investigation into this allegation of misconduct in public office.”

Earlier this month, the Thames Valley Police said it was looking into a claim that the former prince, while serving as U.K. trade envoy in 2010, had shared confidential documents with Epstein.

One email in the latest U.S. release appears to show Mountbatten-Windsor forwarding Epstein a report from his special adviser about the then-prince’s visit to Southeast Asia.

Mountbatten-Windsor has not commented on the latest batch of files published by the Department of Justice.

His arrest caps years of growing pressure on Mountbatten-Windsor, the son of the late Queen Elizabeth II, over his yearslong friendship with Epstein.

Police said they were searching two addresses in Berkshire and Norfolk. Mountbatten-Windsor lived in Windsor’s Royal Lodge in Berkshire until earlier this month; his new home on the Sandringham Estate, a royal residence, is in Norfolk.

Earlier, news photographers captured what appeared to be unmarked police cars arriving at Mountbatten-Windsor’s home in Sandringham.

Norfolk police said in a statement that they were “supporting a Thames Valley Police investigation into misconduct in a public office.”

Image: Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor Arrested On Suspicion Of Misconduct
A man steps out of an unmarked car at the former prince's home on Thursday in Sandringham, Norfolk.Peter Nicholls / Getty Images

In his comments early Thursday, the king directly addressed the British public and signed the statement “Charles R” rather than the usual practice of issuing it through Buckingham Palace:

“I have learned with the deepest concern the news about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and suspicion of misconduct in public office. What now follows is the full, fair and proper process by which this issue is investigated in the appropriate manner and by the appropriate authorities.”

“In this, as I have said before, they have our full and wholehearted support and co-operation.”

The scandal surrounding Mountbatten-Windsor has centered on the accusations of Virginia Roberts Giuffre, who alleged that she was trafficked by Epstein to his powerful friends, including the former prince.

Mountbatten-Windsor stepped back from active royal duties in 2019 and in 2022 reached a legal settlement with Giuffre for an undisclosed amount after she filed a lawsuit in 2021 alleging that the former prince sexually abused her when she was 17.

Mountbatten-Windsor has denied having had sex with Giuffre.

On Thursday, the Giuffre family released a statement responding to Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest.

“Today, our broken hearts have been lifted at the news that no one is above the law, not even royalty,” the family said. “For survivors everywhere, Virginia did this for you.”

It is extremely rare for a senior member of the royal family — or someone who used to hold such status — to be arrested.

In 2002, Princess Anne, the sister of the king and Mountbatten-Windsor, was convicted under the Dangerous Dogs Act after her English bull terrier, Dotty, bit two children while walking in Windsor Great Park.

British media said at the time it was the first instance of a royal being convicted of a criminal offense, but she was not arrested.

“I can’t think of anything like this in modern times,” the royal historian and author Sarah Gristwood told NBC News. “It is the first age in which someone who was very recently a senior royal could be treated like any other common criminal.”

Plenty of senior figures were imprisoned in the times of royal families such as the Tudors and the Stuarts, who ruled between the 15th and 18th centuries, but only on political grounds, Gristwood said.

 

Trump's History with Epstein Pt. 6 | The Daily Show

Trump's History with Epstein Pt. 6 | The Daily Show

 
 

Major European allies decline to join first meeting of Trump’s Board of Peace

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/18/trump-board-of-peace-first-meeting 

 

Major European allies decline to join first meeting of Trump’s Board of Peace

a man speaks into a microphone to a crowd of people while standing in front of a backdrop that says 'board of peace'

Major European allies decline to join first meeting of Trump’s Board of Peace

Dozens of world leaders head to Washington for what White House says will largely be a fundraiser on Thursday

Dozens of world leaders and national delegations will meet in Washington DC on Thursday for the inaugural meeting of Donald Trump’s Board of Peace, as major European allies declined to join the group and criticised the organisation’s murky funding and political mandate.

The White House has indicated that the summit for his new ad hoc council at the renamed Donald J Trump Institute of Peace will heavily function as a fundraising round, with Trump announcing on social media that countries have pledged more than $5bn toward rebuilding Gaza, which has been devastated in the war with Israel and remains in a humanitarian crisis.

The US president claimed that the member states had also “committed thousands of personnel to the International Stabilization Force and Local Police to maintain Security and Peace for Gazans”.

The board was initially formed with the reconstruction of Gaza as its stated primary goal, though its mandate has since been widened by Trump to include responding to other global conflicts.

But, despite Trump’s characteristic bombast, the Board of Peace summit will open to heavy scepticism, with expectations limited both for Thursday’s meeting in Washington and in the Middle East, where the 100-day peace and recovery plan announced by Jared Kushner in Davos has stalled and aid into Gaza remains at a trickle.

Aaron David Miller, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and former US diplomat, said that the Board of Peace would have difficulty resolving the key questions in the Israel-Gaza conflict: who will govern the territory, who will provide security on the ground, and how to deal with the immediate needs of the Palestinian population. There also was little indication how a Board of Peace could break a key deadlock in negotiations between Israel and Hamas, he added.

“The board is a convenient way for a president who’s interested in quick wins, transactions and a lot of motion in lieu of serious movement as a way to project that things are somehow … not dead,” he said, referring to diplomacy. “So you could get some impressive pledges. But pledges are one thing, delivering is another.”

Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, has declined her invitation, and the leaders of key US allies including the United Kingdom, Germany and France have also said they won’t join the Board of Peace. Trump rescinded an invitation to Canada’s Mark Carney following a critical speech by the Canadian prime minister at the World Economic Forum in Davos last month.

The White House initiative received another blow this week as Pope Leo XIV announced that the Vatican would not join the board, which critics have said is an attempt to usurp authority from other major international organisations including the United Nations and may allow Trump to remain as its chair even after his presidency ends.

“One concern,” said Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican’s top diplomat, “is that at the international level it should above all be the [United Nations] that manages these crisis situations. This is one of the points on which we have insisted.”

The meeting instead will be attended by Middle Eastern delegations, including from Israel, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Jordan and Qatar, along with a bevy of international states with little direct engagement in the conflict in Gaza, from Argentina and Paraguay to Hungary to Kazakhstan. Many are seen as currying favor with the Trump administration by joining the Board of Peace – which proposes securing a permanent seat for a $1bn donation – in an effort to prop up his latest signature initiative.

Max Rodenbeck, the Israel/Palestine project director for the International Crisis Group, said that the initiative would be under heavy scrutiny and that there was “huge global scepticism about the shape and intentions of the Board of Peace”.

“If this meeting does not result in fast, tangible improvements on the ground – and particularly on the humanitarian front – its credibility will quickly crumble,” he said.

Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, who signed up to the idea during a visit to Washington last week, has chosen to skip the meeting. The foreign minister, Gideon Saar, a rightwing ally of Netanyahu, will attend instead.

Winning Israeli cooperation with the peace plan is expected to be extremely hard in an election year when Netanyahu is trying to hold on to the extreme far-right wing of his party and wants to avoid the perception of working alongside regional powers like Qatar or Turkey, which have close links to Hamas.

Developments on the ground have indicated that few of the political or security organisations under the Trump-backed peace plan have actually made progress toward resolving the conflict or easing Gaza’s humanitarian crisis.

Nearly a month on from the unveiling of the 100-day peace and recovery plan by Kushner, who is also Trump’s son-in-law, the people designated to carry out that plan are still hazy about how it is supposed to work.

Fifteen members of the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG), a body of technocrats established under Trump’s plan, are waiting in Cairo, anxious to show rapid improvements in living standards to the people of Gaza, but lack the tools to get anything done.

Nickolay Mladenov, who is supposed to act as the Board of Peace’s high representative for Gaza, has had little visibility so far and said even less about his role. The NCAG’s first major post on social media, put up on Saturday, suggested a degree of frustration, and a message that it was not willing to be a puppet.

“We emphasize that full administrative, civilian, and police control by the NCAG is not merely procedural; [the] NCAG cannot be expected to carry responsibility without the full administrative, civilian, and police powers necessary to implement its mandate effectively,” the NCAG post on X said.

“Everything is going slower than expected, and everyone is very frustrated,” said Gershon Baskin, an Israeli commentator and peace activist who played a role in negotiating the peace plan.

“The NCAG are staying in Cairo until they have a clear understanding that they can achieve something. Going to Gaza now would be very unconstructive. They would not be able to achieve anything,” Baskin said. They don’t even know what their budget is, how much money they have to work with and what their tasks are going to be. It’s not even clear to them under whose authority they’re working.”

There are some moves towards building an international stabilisation force (ISF) envisaged in the Trump plan as a support to the Palestinian police. Indonesia has already offered 8,000 troops; a barracks site is being prepared for them inside Gaza and there is reportedly an office at a civil-military coordination centre with “ISF” on the door. But no one is inside.

Diplomats in Jerusalem are worried that the ISF plan will be doomed to failure if the right conditions are not created for its deployment, which include a feasible plan for Hamas disarmament and IDF withdrawal.

Aid into Gaza remains severely limited, and, in a key obstacle to any reconstruction efforts, there has been no change in the highly restrictive list of “dual-use” items that are banned, which include almost anything made of metal, including metal tent poles.

“Israel is continuing to encroach on Gaza territory with the yellow line going further west. People are still being killed, buildings are still being demolished,” said Sam Rose, the acting Gaza director of the UN relief agency, Unrwa. “It seems we’ve kind of fallen into a pattern of managing the conflict, or managing the post-conflict, in a way we never thought we would.”

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Trump judge says the quiet part out loud

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/2/18/2369325/-Trump-judge-in-antifa-case-declares-mistrial-over-civil-rights-shirt?pm_campaign=front_page&pm_source=top_news_slot_9&pm_medium=web

 

Trump judge says the quiet part out loud

 

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A demonstrator holds a sign reading 'ICE OUT' during a protest outside the office of Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., on Monday, Jan. 26, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Adam Gray)
A demonstrator holds a sign reading "ICE OUT."

U.S. District Judge Mark Pittman, appointed by President Donald Trump, declared a mistrial on Tuesday in the “terrorism” trial of nine people whom the Trump administration says are part of a “North-Texas antifa cell.”

Now, there is no mechanism by which Trump can designate antifa or anything else as a “domestic terrorist organization,” because that is not a thing that exists in the law. A non-Trumpy judge might have grappled with that little problem instead of doing whatever the hell it is Pittman is doing.

Pittman is a real innovator here, what with the wildly unusual decision to declare a mistrial during jury selection. What, pray tell, required such a measure?

One of the defense attorneys, MarQuetta Clayton, committed the unbelievable crime of wearing a T-shirt with images of civil rights leaders and protests from the Civil Rights Movement, in honor of Jesse Jackson, who had died that morning.

Clayton had worn the shirt all day, so Pittman should’ve had ample time to see it, but he didn’t decide that a mistrial was necessary until Clayton began questioning potential jurors.

FILE - Federal agents walk down a street while conducting immigration enforcement operations, Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy, File)
Federal immigration agents walk down a street in Minneapolis.

Pittman first halted jury selection because he was frustrated with Clayton’s questions, which is a problem in itself. Then he decided what he was really mad about was the shirt: “I don't know why in the world you would think that's appropriate.” A portion of the pool of 75 prospective jurors had voiced views against Trump and Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and it looks like Pittman decided to torpedo the jury pool because of that. Gotta put on a show if you want to hand Trump a win!

Pittman said that the shirt was a political message that could bias jurors by equating the defendants with the Civil Rights Movement and that the defense lawyers would be mad if the prosecutor wore pro-ICE or pro-Trump clothing.

Except the defense attorney wasn’t wearing anything related to ICE, Trump, or even recent civil rights history. Pittman is saying that the mere invocation of decades-old civil rights history is unfair to the poor sweet babies of ICE because potential jurors might view them as violating civil rights, which … if the shoe fits?

A former federal prosecutor for the district twisted herself in knots when trying to justify Pitman’s move to the media: “The fact that it was a T-shirt that had graphics that could be connected to the theme of the defendant's defense, which was that she attended a peaceful protest and did not intend to hurt any law enforcement officer, is likely why he found a mistrial."

That explanation might hang together a bit more if Pittman had talked to Clayton about it immediately. Instead, he waited hours to throw his little tantrum.

Part of why Pittman doesn’t deserve the benefit of the doubt here is that he’s been openly targeting the defense attorneys for months. In January, he fined three of them because he didn’t like their discovery motions. He almost blocked another one, George Lobb, from representing one of the defendants because Pittman said Lobb didn’t meet the residency requirements to practice there. This is not an evenhanded fellow.

This isn’t all that surprising from a standard-issue Trump judge like Pittman. He’s a guy who loved nationwide injunctions back when Barack Obama was president, but who, during Trump’s first term, criticized a judge’s nationwide injunction against Trump’s Muslim travel ban. 

FILE - In this Oct. 18, 2017, file photo, protesters gather at a rally in Washington. The Supreme Court is allowing the Trump administration to fully enforce a ban on travel to the United States by residents of six mostly Muslim countries. The justices say in an order on Dec. 4, that the policy can take full effect even as legal challenges against it make their way through the courts. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)
Protesters rally in October 2017 against the Trump administration banning U.S.-bound travel from six Muslim-majority countries.

Pittman was also certain that Obama’s Department of Justice was just sitting around doing woke DEI all the time rather than prosecuting people. “In practice, the Justice Department’s congressionally-mandated job of prosecuting criminals often took a back seat to curing perceived social ills, such as the prosecution of local police departments for not having enough female or minority officers,” Pittman said in a 2017 speech.

If only Obama had instead decided to install a bunch of unqualified former personal attorneys and fired scores of career attorneys for having worked on past cases Obama didn’t like, then perhaps his DOJ could have been as resoundingly successful as the current one, right? 

Pittman is a clown for even entertaining the whole “Trump wrote down on a piece of paper that he hated antifa very much so that is law now” thing that is going on here. The president cannot make laws via executive order. He cannot invent new crimes via executive order. But Pittman doesn’t seem all that bothered by such niceties, unlike when he threw out former President Joe Biden’s student loan relief measures, howling that it represented a “complete usurpation” of congressional authority by the president.

So, using an existing law as the basis for ordering student loan relief? Monstrous and democracy-ending. But letting Trump just rule via pettiness, persecution, and vibes? Amazing, democracy-enhancing. 

Pittman is set to reconvene the trial on Monday with a new set of jurors, presumably ones thoroughly vetted for their deep and abiding love of ICE. Pittman ended Tuesday with a little speech about how “absolutely disgusted” he is about partisan division, adding that “we have to find a way to turn down the anger.”

Buddy, you torpedoed a trial because you got sad about a shirt. You are the partisan here. Turn it down yourself.

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U2 - American Obituary (Lyric Video)

U2 - American Obituary (Lyric Video)