Jeffrey Epstein Allegedly Suggested Beatrice And Eugenie Hold Business Shares To Help Sarah Ferguson
Emails reveal Epstein's alleged plan to involve royal princesses, Beatrice and Eugenie, in a business venture to help Sarah Ferguson.

Jeffrey Epstein allegedly proposed putting Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie into shares of a business venture to ease Sarah Ferguson's financial woes, according to newly released emails from the US Department of Justice Epstein files.
Ferguson, the Duchess of York, had approached Epstein in 2010 amid debts of around £650,000 from the collapse of her US lifestyle brand Hartmoor, asking to 'borrow 50 or 100,000 US dollars' to cover bills.
Epstein, fresh from jail time for soliciting prostitution from a minor, declined direct aid but steered her toward a business fix involving supplements entrepreneur Keith Frankel.
Epstein Allegedly Suggested Beatrice And Eugenie Hold Business Shares
The idea surfaced in an early morning email from Epstein on 8 March 2010, after a meeting with Frankel. 'Keith just left. We should talk, he was concerned that you had the rights to use your name. He was concerned that someone said you did not want equity, ( the [Beatrice] and [Eugenie] should own the shares ),' Epstein wrote to Ferguson.

The plan, as outlined in the emails, was for Ferguson to lend her name to sell health products, including fish oil supplements, possibly through QVC. Frankel reportedly worried about her rights to her name and whether she wanted equity herself, leading Epstein to float the princesses as shareholders.
Beatrice was 21 and Eugenie 19 at the time, and there is no indication they knew of the proposal or that shares were ever issued. Ferguson's financial straits were acute, with Epstein replying to her loan request, 'i cannot do anything until July at earliest, dictated by current restrictions'.
When she asked him to approach Giuseppe on her behalf, Epstein demurred. 'i could but it would be impolite, you need to address these issues, you are great,' he wrote. Giuseppe is identified as New York restaurateur Giuseppe Cipriani, a long‑time friend of Ferguson's.
Sarah Ferguson's Emails To Jeffrey Epstein Grew Personal As She Sought Help
In January 2010, she emailed Epstein, 'You are a legend. I really don't have the words to describe, my love, gratitude for your generosity and kindness. Xx I am at your service. Just marry me.'
Earlier, in 2009 while Epstein was still jailed, other exchanges reported show Ferguson offering Epstein private tours of Buckingham Palace. She offered to 'organise anything' for a VIP tour of London for the daughter of his lawyer Alan Dershowitz, hinting at access to Buckingham Palace or Windsor Castle. Epstein later told associates Ferguson could arrange tea there.
In 2011, after publicly regretting their association, she emailed to say she 'did not' and 'would not' call him a paedophile, claiming it was to 'protect my own brand'.
Epstein even enlisted publicist Mike Sitrick for a statement after her interview distancing herself. Ferguson had previously admitted accepting nearly $20,000 (£14,975) from him to pay debts, calling it a 'terrible error of judgment'.
These files, part of millions released by the DOJ, add to scrutiny of Ferguson's ties to Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019.

Ferguson was previously married to ex-Prince Andrew who has faced his own fallout from the association.
The email exchange occurred after Epstein had completed a 13‑month sentence in a Florida jail for soliciting and procuring a minor for prostitution, People reported.
© Copyright IBTimes 2025. All rights reserved.

















