Feb 17 • 21:56 UTC 🇬🇧 UK Guardian

Police assessing records of private flights at Stansted after publication of Epstein files

UK police are reviewing private flight records at Stansted airport following Gordon Brown’s claims connecting the site to Jeffrey Epstein's activities.

UK police have started to evaluate records of private flights at Stansted airport in the wake of disclosures from Jeffrey Epstein files. This scrutiny follows former Prime Minister Gordon Brown's assertions that the documents detail the notorious sex offender's use of the airport to facilitate illegal activities, including transporting young girls from Latvia, Lithuania, and Russia. Brown highlighted that the files indicate Epstein's private jets made a staggering 90 flights to and from UK airspace, with 15 occurring after his 2008 conviction for child prostitution.

In his commentary for the New Statesman, Brown expressed concern over the alleged operations at Stansted, where he suggests women were transferred between Epstein's aircraft without oversight or intervention from local authorities. He stated that the low airport fees at Stansted compared to European hubs like Paris made it an attractive route for Epstein's nefarious activities. Furthermore, Brown insisted that the ease with which women could enter the UK without the need for British visas raises serious questions about regulatory gaps and the effectiveness of the existing systems meant to protect vulnerable individuals.

These revelations have sparked a public outcry and renewed scrutiny of Epstein's network and the implications of his illicit travel activities. The involvement of high-profile figures, including a former prime minister, adds gravity to the allegations, pushing authorities to re-evaluate not only what transpired at the airport but also how such troubling conduct escaped law enforcement notice for so long. The police assessment could lead to broader inquiries into the overarching systems in place to monitor private flights and the safeguarding of minors within such contexts.

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