Epstein files could be just tip of the iceberg for Andrew investigation
But it will not have stopped there.
One email in particular stood out.
Within five minutes of receiving them he seems to have forwarded them to Epstein, who had by this point already been convicted and spent time in prison for sex offences. A month later, on Christmas Eve, Andrew appeared to email Epstein a confidential briefing on investment opportunities in the reconstruction of Helmand Province, Afghanistan, which was overseen at the time by British armed forces and funded by UK government money. In a further email dated 9 February 2011, Andrew seems to suggest Epstein invest in a private equity firm he had visited a week before.
But detectives will have not relied only on the emails that we have seen.
The palace said last Monday that it would "support" Thames Valley Police.
The National Crime Agency is helping UK police forces with those requests.
At this stage, Andrew has only been arrested. He has not been charged. He has always denied any wrongdoing arising from his relationship with Epstein and has not responded to specific BBC questions about the files released in January.
The police released Andrew under investigation on Thursday evening.
Being released under investigation does not rule out further questioning at a later date
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