On May 7th, 2025, the world was reminded that truth, like decay, is not always announced but uncovered. James O’Keefe, the tireless provocateur behind O’Keefe Media Group, released the first in what he promises is a series of undercover videos that may very well bury any remaining illusion of innocence Prince Andrew might have once claimed. The subject of the sting is John Bryan, a figure long-adjacent to the British Royal Family, who during an undercover interview conducted by a reporter he met via a dating app (likely Bumble), confessed what everyone knew: that Jeffrey Epstein provided underage girls for Prince Andrew to abuse.
The admission, caught on camera, is as damning as it is unsurprising. For years, Bryan had defended Andrew in public, brushing off accusations as implausible and insisting Epstein had failed to trap the prince. But under the veil of flirtation and drink, Bryan dropped the scripted defenses and acknowledged what the public has long known: that Andrew was, in fact, a participant in Epstein’s underage trafficking scheme.
This latest revelation follows decades of mounting evidence, half-hearted royal denials, and implausible public interviews. Epstein’s relationship with the Duke of York has been a scandalous thread in the broader tapestry of elite immunity and systemic depravity. Yet the specifics of Bryan’s involvement, his previous denials, and now his exposed confession, require a sober examination, less for shock value, and more for what they reveal about the institutional habits of the powerful: deny until caught, then forget until the next denial.
To understand Bryan’s fall from denier to confessor, one must first appreciate the man’s peculiar orbit. In 1992, John Bryan emerged from obscurity into tabloid lore when he was photographed poolside in Saint-Tropez, famously sucking the toes of Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York. At the time, Ferguson was still married to Prince Andrew, and the images triggered what was perhaps the first modern scandal involving a senior royal. Bryan, a Texas-born financier, was dubbed her "financial adviser," though the nature of their relationship was self-evident. Following that episode, Bryan all but disappeared from public life, resurfacing only sporadically, most notably in defense of the very family whose honor he once helped desecrate.
John Bryan and Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York in Saint-Tropez
It was in this capacity, as a former insider and self-appointed media surrogate, that Bryan weighed in on the Epstein affair. In 2022, he gave a series of interviews in which he defended Andrew and portrayed Epstein as a master blackmailer who failed to trap the prince. "Epstein tried to lure Andrew into his web," Bryan claimed, "but I believe his ultimate mark was the Queen. Andrew never gave him the ammunition." Bryan went so far as to assert that Epstein wanted to blackmail Queen Elizabeth by compromising her son, but that Andrew had been too careful, too innocent, or perhaps too dull to fall into such a trap.
Those claims, already strained by the public record, now appear positively ludicrous. The video published by O’Keefe captures Bryan confessing not merely to Epstein’s intentions, but to Andrew’s participation. There is no ambiguity, no misinterpretation. The man who once insisted on Andrew’s innocence now says, on camera, that Epstein was supplying Andrew with underage girls. The implication is not merely that Andrew was targeted, but that he partook. This admission destroys the last defense remaining to the embattled Duke: that his association with Epstein was merely unwise, not criminal.
Prince Andrew with Jeffrey Epstein in Central Park
But the rot was visible long before Bryan’s indiscretion. Prince Andrew’s fall from grace was a slow-motion implosion. His friendship with Epstein dates back to at least the early 2000s. Epstein was already a registered sex offender when Andrew was photographed visiting him in New York in 2010. That visit, a stroll through Central Park that remains one of the most enduring images of royal disgrace, prompted Andrew’s resignation as the UK’s Special Trade Envoy in 2011.
Prince Andrew and Virginia Giuffre
Then came the allegations of Virginia Giuffre, who in 2015 accused Andrew of having sex with her when she was 17, trafficked by Epstein. Buckingham Palace issued a rare and emphatic denial. But denials are not evidence, and Giuffre’s detailed testimony, corroborating flight logs, and the now-infamous photograph of Andrew with his arm around her waist made the denial look like precisely what it was: damage control.
In 2019, after Epstein’s arrest and subsequent murder, Andrew granted the BBC’s Newsnight a catastrophic interview in which he claimed he could not have had sex with Giuffre because he was at a Pizza Express in Woking, and further, that he could not sweat due to a peculiar medical condition allegedly caused by an adrenaline overdose during the Falklands War. The excuses were so absurd, so theatrical, that they only deepened suspicion. Within days, Andrew announced he would step back from royal duties.
The civil lawsuit brought by Giuffre in 2021 further cornered the prince. Andrew’s legal team attempted to invoke a 2009 settlement between Giuffre and Epstein to shield him from liability. The court rejected that argument, and in February 2022, Andrew settled the case out of court for a reported sum of £12 million. As is often the case with such settlements, there was no admission of guilt. But there was no proclamation of innocence either.
Now, three years later, Bryan’s unguarded admission threatens to retroactively transform that settlement into a tacit confession. If Epstein was, as Bryan now admits, providing underage girls to Andrew, then Giuffre was not merely credible, she was representative. That is the darker implication. There may be more victims. In fact, there almost certainly are.
And here is where O’Keefe’s role becomes more than theatrical. Whatever one thinks of his methods, sting operations conducted via dating apps, hidden cameras, strategic editing, his work has again punctured a membrane of elite protection that no mainstream outlet dared touch. O’Keefe has said he believes releasing the video places his life at risk. That may sound dramatic, but only if one underestimates the stakes. He promises additional videos, including a confrontation with Bryan. If the first video is any indication, the others may shatter what little deniability remains around Andrew.
The Royal Family, for its part, has responded in the only way it knows how: silence. It is a silence that pretends to be dignified, but which now reads as cowardice. Prince Andrew remains stripped of his military affiliations and royal patronages. He retains the title Duke of York but is a royal in name only. His public appearances are sparse, his invitations limited. He lives a life of exile funded by family largesse, a disgraced man hiding in plain sight.
Bryan’s confession matters not because it tells us something new, but because it confirms what was already known by the attentive and believed by the informed. For more than a decade, the evidence has pointed in one direction. What was lacking was not proof, but permission to say it aloud. John Bryan, perhaps inadvertently, has given us that permission.
There are more videos coming. More truths will be confessed, perhaps by accident, perhaps by ambush. The truth has a strange way of clawing its way out, even from the mouths of those who once guarded it. And when it does, the question will no longer be whether Prince Andrew did it. It will be what price the monarchy was willing to pay to hide it.
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So where are the tapes and the indictments?
I've heard Lady Colin Campbell ( Lady C) talk about this. It's her position that Andrew fell on his sword and settled the lawsuit because the Queen's jubilee was was approaching, and he wanted it all over for her sake. I don't know, it's all so unseemly.