Thursday, 5 August 2021

Reinvention ? Revisiting Sarah Ferguson.


Inside the Reinvention of Sarah Ferguson, the Ultimate Royal Rebel

 

The Duchess of York has discovered that the best way to find a happy ending is to write it herself.

 



BY ANDREW GOLDMAN AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY MISAN HARRIMAN

 JUL 26, 2021

https://www.townandcountrymag.com/society/tradition/a37105968/sarah-ferguson-duchess-of-york-her-heart-for-a-compass-novel-interview-2021/

 

(…)” The Fleet Street papers initially loved her raunchy edge but eventually decided it was more vulgar than charming. “It was always that Diana was portrayed as the saint and I was portrayed as the sinner,” she says. “Bad Fergie sold an awful lot of papers.” This new not-so-naughty Fergie, however, hopes to sell a lot of books. She’s about to release her first romance novel, Her Heart for a Compass, which is described as “a novel of the Victorian era” but is recognizable to close readers as more than that: part historical biography, part roman à clef, packaged safely in a fictional context.”

 


(…) “The one figure in Ferguson’s life with significant staying power is Prince Andrew, who has demonstrated similar devotion. “There is no question that we remain steadfast to each other in loyalty, integrity, honor,” she says, haltingly, when asked about his relationship with Epstein. Back in 2011 she dealt directly with the fact that she had accepted $24,500 from Epstein to help restructure her debts, remarking she was “just so contrite I cannot say,” a press strategy that might have saved her ex-husband’s reputation had he been half as proactive. “The family is everything to me,” she says. “The most important thing is the girls.”

 



Duchess of York apologises for 'gigantic error of judgement' over debt

12 April 2012

https://www.standard.co.uk/hp/front/duchess-of-york-apologises-for-gigantic-error-of-judgement-over-debt-6574623.html

 

The Duchess of York made a heartfelt apology today for accepting money from billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

 

In an exclusive interview with the Evening Standard, she owned up to "a gigantic error of judgment" but strongly defended Prince Andrew over the controversy surrounding his friendship with the financier, a convicted sex offender.

 

She also made a passionate defence of her former husband who she described as a "first-rate father and first-rate man ... who does not know how to tell an untruth or behave dishonourably".

 

Andrew's future as a trade envoy was in doubt today after a string of revelations about his ties with Epstein, including a recent stay at the tycoon's home in New York and past visits to a Florida mansion where young women were allegedly groomed by Epstein for sex.

 

Downing Street expressed "full confidence" in Andrew, but Business Secretary Vince Cable put clear distance between ministers and the prince's future, saying there would be "conversations" about his role.

 

Sarah's apology for allowing Epstein to provide £15,000 to help pay off her debts may take some of the pressure off the prince.

 

"I personally, on behalf of myself, deeply regret that Jeffrey Epstein became involved in any way with me," she said. "I abhor paedophilia and any sexual abuse of children and know that this was a gigantic error of judgment on my behalf.

 

"I am just so contrite I cannot say. Whenever I can I will repay the money and will have nothing ever to do with Jeffrey Epstein ever again."

 

The money was paid to Sarah's former assistant, Johnny O'Sullivan, who was claiming £78,000 in unpaid wages and other bills. Epstein stepped in after discussing the affair with Andrew's office and dealt directly with Mr O'Sullivan, who accepted £15,000 which then allowed a wider restructuring of Sarah's £5 million debts to take place.

 

Epstein had personally offered to help the duchess as he knew that Mr O'Sullivan was insisting his money was paid in full, which meant the rest of the debt could not be restructured.

 

Epstein did not speak directly to the duchess about the payment but through the duke's office and then directly with Mr O'Sullivan.

 

The duchess said: "This is the first time ever in my life, and I mean 'ever', that I have been debt free. It allows me to go forward to do what I do, being a good mother, a philanthropist for children and also an author of children's books.

 

"I cannot state more strongly that I know a terrible, terrible error of judgment was made, my having anything do with Jeffrey Epstein. What he did was wrong and for which he was rightly jailed.

 

"I had no idea of the string of other allegations and court cases against him and I am distraught that I should have allowed myself to get out of debt with any help from him when my judgment was clouded.

 

"Once again my errors have compounded and rebounded and also inadvertently impacted on the man I admire most in the world, the duke.

 

"He has supported me and come to my rescue again and again and there is absolutely nothing that I would not do for him. This make it even more painful for me that what happened has been used by people to make his life more difficult."

 

The duchess added: "I would throw myself under a bus for him. It is in times of difficulty that character shows itself. I am fiery Irish redhead and I am to remain strong, fight strong and try to do what is right.

 

"The duke is a man who does not know how to tell an untruth or behave dishonourably. There have been errors of judgment but nothing substantive has been done wrong by him, ever.

 

"I am not going to stand back and let him take any more abuse from any suggestion or implications of impropriety. It is so wrong.

 

"He is a first-rate father; he's a first-rate man, the finest that I know. I will not have his name tarnished by me yet again. Look at all that he has done for the country. He works tirelessly."

 

Sarah believed at the time that she had done nothing wrong because she had no contact with Epstein herself. She now says she realises that this was an error and concedes that she did benefit from his paying Mr O'Sullivan.

 

"I have made another huge error in my life in order to get debt free but the duke and I are a united front on all that has happened over the last few days. He, my girls and I are a unit who will always stick together even though we live separate lives."

 

Sarah made clear that the duke was going to New York anyway on the fateful visit when he stayed with Epstein and was not staying at his house at her request. There is no suggestion of the duke having sexual contact with the girls involved or being aware of Epstein's activities.

 

Sarah said: "The duke sorted out my debts and he and his office have been more than marvellous."

 

Sarah said that as trade envoy Andrew had "done an amazing job for the country and people should respect that". He has been the UK's Special Representative for International Trade and Investment since 2001. He has known Epstein, 58, since the early Nineties. The financier was sentenced to 18 months in prison in 2008 for soliciting an underage girl for prostitution. Sarah said her desperation to be debt-free blinded her to the consequences of getting involved with Epstein but insisted: "I will never have anything to do with him again. I deeply regret it. How many more times do you want me to underline that?"

 

"My whole work is charity and children's books and I just did not think this through. I did not see the ramifications I was so intent on being clear of my debt." The duchess spent this weekend with Andrew and her daughters. She said: "As the father of my children I am fed up with the way he has been portrayed. I believe nothing improper or untoward took place with the Duke and anything to do with Epstein."

 

Downing Street denied reports that the Government had decided to downgrade Andrew's role and that a review would be held to reduce his responsibilities.

 

Timeline: The Prince and the paedophile

December 2010

Prince Andrew is pictured walking through New York's Central Park with Jeffrey Epstein. The pictures were made public by the News of the World two weeks ago. Andrew had reportedly been staying at Epstein's New York mansion. The financier had been jailed two years earlier for soliciting prostitution from minors and served 13 months.

 

February 2011

A picture is released of The Duke of York, 51, with his arm around the bare midriff of Virginia Roberts, then 17, a vulnerable teenager allegedly hired to work as an erotic masseuse and perform sexual favours for Epstein and his friends.

 

March 2011

Prince Andrew promises to sever his links with child sex offender Epstein. The Duke of York admitted that meeting the disgraced billionaire in December was "unwise" and ruled out further visits to the Florida mansion where Epstein allegedly sexually exploited underage girls.

 

March 2011

It is revealed that the Duchess of York Sarah Ferguson accepted £15,000 from Epstein to help pay off her debts. Epstein paid the money directly to her former personal assistant, Johnny O'Sullivan. The duchess has now admitted that it was a mistake to rely financially on the disgraced billionaire and said she will return the money.

 

March 2011

The FBI says it will reopen its investigation into Epstein following the revelations about his sexual exploitation of teenage girls and his links with high-profile people including Prince Andrew.

 

March 2011

It emerges that the prince has been named in legal documents about Epstein. Epstein's PA Sarah Kellen and his model girlfriend Nadia Marcinkova were both questioned over whether Andrew had sex with teenage girls. Both of them refused to answer the questions in order not to implicate themselves, the legal papers show.


One Year After His Disastrous TV Interview, Prince Andrew Remains a Royal Outcast

 

Time has not helped heal the Prince's public image.

 

BY VICTORIA MURPHY

 NOV 14, 2020

prince Andrew LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHAGETTY IMAGES

https://www.townandcountrymag.com/society/tradition/a34643050/prince-andrew-status-royal-outcast-interview-anniversary/

 

Only Prince Andrew knows exactly what he was thinking when he walked into his now infamous interview with the BBC’s Newsnight about his controversial friendship with Jeffrey Epstein. One can presume, however, that he was not expecting that just two days after it aired in full that he would be releasing a statement announcing he was stepping back from public duties.

 

It has been almost exactly 12 months since Andrew’s disastrous choice of words sealed his own fate, and his November 20, 2019 statement remains the last thing posted on his once busy Twitter feed. It would be hard for anyone to forget his spectacular fall from grace, but the statement also serves as a reminder that time has so far not been a healer for the beleaguered Prince’s public image. If anything, the opposite is true, with Andrew's removal as a face of the monarchy even more total than initially anticipated.

 

At the time he announced he was stepping back, it was suggested that Andrew would still be expected to attend certain events publicly with his family. Examples cited of when we might see him alongside the Queen and the rest of her descendants included Trooping the Colour, Christmas at Sandringham, and Remembrance Sunday.

 

But the Duke of York was nowhere to be seen as 10 members of the royal family made their annual pilgrimage to the Cenotaph in central London last week to honor the war dead. The Queen’s second son may have served with the Royal Navy for 22 years and continue to hold honorary military appointments. But now, his every public appearance symbolizes nothing but controversy.

 

By the time he didn’t show for Remembrance it was hardly a surprise as it followed 12 months of bowing out of appearing publicly at all. The Prince kept a low profile at Sandringham at Christmas last year and did not attend the main 11 a.m. service for which the royals walk past crowds on their way to St Mary Magdalene Church. There was no debate about whether he would be at Trooping the Colour in June because the Queen’s official birthday celebrations were completely overhauled and she was the only royal who attended. But the fact that he did not feature in his own daughter, Princess Beatrice’s official wedding photographs sent the clearest message so far that the idea he can appear publicly at family events is still considered too much of a risk for the monarchy’s image.

 

Andrew has long been an unpopular royal with the British public, with a YouGov poll in 2011—the year after he was photographed walking with Epstein in Central Park—putting his net approval rating at negative 19. A recent poll by the same firm puts his current net favorability score at minus 73%. There is also no avoiding the fact that the Prince’s friendship with Epstein will continue to cause damage to the Windsor brand whenever the subject surfaces. And the spotlight remains on him over the issue as his friend Ghislaine Maxwell remains in custody charged in connection with Epstein’s crimes—allegations she denies.

 

However, it has now been almost a whole year since the moment Andrew sealed his fate in the court of public opinion—and for a family whose activities strictly follow the rhythm of the calendar even during unprecedented times, this marks something of a milestone. The question marks over which annual events he would appear at publicly after stepping back have now largely been answered. Perhaps in the future things will change, but for now it appears that Prince Andrew remains, officially, out of the picture.

 

VICTORIA MURPHY

Town & Country Contributing Editor Victoria Murphy has reported on the British Royal Family for nine years.


This article is more than 10 years old

Sarah Ferguson faces bankruptcy after running up debts of millions

 

This article is more than 10 years old

Queen said to be concerned Duchess of York could become first royal to be declared legally bankrupt in court

 

Jenny Percival

Sun 8 Aug 2010 15.57 BST

https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2010/aug/08/sarah-ferguson-bankrupt-debts-millions

 

The Duchess of York is doing "everything she can" to avoid bankruptcy as she struggles to manage debts running into millions of pounds, it was revealed today.

 

Sarah Ferguson has paid off all her personal debts, her spokesman said, and her business debts – some of which are disputed – were "being managed", although voluntary bankruptcy was still an option.

 

Ferguson's money woes became public after a newspaper claimed her personal and business debts had risen to almost £5m, prompting fears in the royal family that bankruptcy was now her best option.

 

However, her spokesman said the figure was exaggerated. Sources said later that the Duchess owed around £2m. Ferguson's spokesman said she was reluctant to declare herself bankrupt. "There is a number of options open to the duchess, of which bankruptcy is one. But it would be premature to say she is going into bankruptcy as the situation is being managed," she said.

 

The Queen was "deeply concerned" about Ferguson's debts, according to the Sunday Telegraph, and had discussed them with David Cameron recently at one of his weekly audiences. The newspaper said Prince Andrew, Ferguson's ex-husband, was masterminding a "rescue plan" to avoid the embarrassment of filing for bankruptcy. No senior member of the royal family has been declared bankrupt.

 

Ferguson went public with her financial problems in May, after being caught in a cash-for-access scandal.

 

She was filmed accepting money from a News Of The World reporter posing as a business tycoon, in exchange for an introduction to Andrew. In an interview later with US chat show queen Oprah Winfrey, the ex-royal admitted she was "substantially" in debt and was considering filing for bankruptcy.

 

She declined to say exactly how much she owed, nor would she confirm that she received only £15,000 a year from her divorce settlement. The Sunday Telegraph said that more than half of Ferguson's debts related to money owed in the US, primarily for lawyers' fees.

 

Since divorcing in 1996, Ferguson has written children's books, made television documentaries and acted as a spokeswoman for Weight Watchers in America. Hartmoor, the US company that dealt with her media, publishing and licensing work, folded last year with debts of £650,000.

 

One debt expert said today that Ferguson would benefit from bankruptcy, even if it proved an embarrassing experience.

 

Richard Sorksy, a senior counsellor with the UK Insolvency Helpline, said: "It's a simple civil court procedure costing around £500 which will enable her to walk away from every single penny of her debt. If your assets are of a lesser value than your debts and if your income is not great enough to meet your expenses, it's generally a good option."

 

However, he added: "In Sarah Ferguson's case, it's a matter of the higher you climb, the harder you fall; it could be publicly humiliating if every dirty detail of her debt were to be made available in the high court."


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