The Western Journal

Peter Mandelson denies ‘baseless’ claim of fleeing UK for British Virgin Islands

Former UK ambassador to teh United States Peter Mandelson has denied baseless claims that he planned to flee the United Kingdom for the British Virgin Islands before his arrest by the Metropolitan Police in connection with an Epstein-related examination. Mandelson was detained and then released on bail; his lawyers described the suggestion as unfounded and saeid he woudl cooperate with investigators to clear his name. His legal team has asked the police to disclose the evidence supporting the arrest. The article also touches on broader Epstein-related coverage and mentions othre related developments, including police actions involving other high-profile figures and a government issue over vetting files for a 2001 trade envoy post.


Peter Mandelson denies ‘baseless’ claim of fleeing UK for British Virgin Islands

Lord Peter Mandelson is denying accusations that he was preparing to flee the United Kingdom before his arrest by the Metropolitan Police.

The former British ambassador to the United States was released from police custody on Tuesday after having been detained the previous day, according to his lawyers at Mishcon de Reya. Mandelson said it was a “baseless suggestion” that he was planning to resettle in a foreign country amid the scandal of his relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

“Peter Mandelson was arrested yesterday despite an agreement with the police that he would attend an interview next month on a voluntary basis,” a Tuesday statement from Mandelson’s legal counsel stated. “The arrest was prompted by a baseless suggestion that he was planning to leave the country and take up permanent residence abroad.”

In this photo taken from a Sky News video, Britain’s former ambassador to the U.S., Peter Mandelson, is seen leaving a police station in London in the early hours of Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026. (Sky News Exclusive via AP)

“There is absolutely no truth whatsoever in any such suggestion,” the statement continued. “Peter Mandelson’s overriding priority is to cooperate with the police investigation, as he has done throughout this process, and to clear his name.

”Mishcon de Reya is now requesting the Metropolitan Police to produce the “evidence relied upon to justify the arrest.”

Mandelson, as well as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, have dominated the British press for weeks after the latest tranche of Epstein emails released by the U.S. government further exposed their illicit leaking of state information to the deceased financier.

Former BBC journalist Emily Maitlis, who gained international notoriety after interviewing then-Prince Andrew about his relationship with Epstein, claimed on her podcast The News Agents that she viewed a Tuesday message from Mandelson to another journalist. In the message the former ambassador alleged the “police arrested me because they claimed the Lord Speaker received information that I was about to flee to the British Virgin Islands.”

Madelson reportedly dismissed the allegation as “complete fiction.”

Michael Forsyth, the Lord Speaker to whom Mandelson was referring in the alleged message, clarified to the public that he had not communicated any such tip to the authorities.

British Ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson, speaks during the rededication ceremony of the George Washington Statue in the National Gallery in London, Wednesday, June 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

His office wrote: “Any suggestion at all that the lord speaker received information about Lord Mandelson’s movements, or communicated any such information to the Metropolitan Police Service, is entirely false and without foundation.”

UK POLICE ARREST ANDREW MOUNTBATTEN-WINDSOR OVER MISCONDUCT TIED TO JEFFREY EPSTEIN

The Thames Valley Police have completed their investigation of Mountbatten-Windsor’s former Royal Lodge residence.

“Officers have now left the location we have been searching in Berkshire,” the department announced in a statement late Tuesday. “This concludes the search activity that commenced following our arrest of a man in his sixties from Norfolk on Thursday.”

Trade Minister Sir Chris Bryant announced at the conclusion of a Tuesday debate in the House of Commons that the government will release the files related to his vetting to become a U.K. trade envoy in 2001 “as soon as is practicable and possible within the law.”



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