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Charles III Visits the Estate Where Prince Andrew Lives - and a New Police Investigation Has Been Opened Against Him

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Charles III Visits the Estate Where Prince Andrew Lives - and a New Police Investigation Has Been Opened Against Him

King Charles III has been spotted arriving at Wood Farm on the Sandringham estate in Norfolk - the same estate where his brother Prince Andrew has been living at Mesh Farm since April this year. Two royal brothers, two homes on the same property, and an investigation into sexual misconduct that has been reopened.

Context: Andrew is 66, has already lost all his titles over his ties to Epstein, and has been removed from public life for months. He moved out of Royal Lodge in Windsor - where he had lived for more than two decades - and is now housed at Mesh Farm. A new case is being investigated: a woman claims she was taken to his former residence for private meetings.

"It's a complex process; our experienced detective team is methodically analysing significant information from members of the public and other sources," said Deputy Chief Constable Oliver Wright of the Thames Valley Police. This is the second serious police case in a single year. Andrew was detained and released on 19 February, his 66th birthday, following new revelations from declassified documents in the Epstein case.

King Charles arrived in a Lotus Eletre, with security, wearing a serious expression. Reports state that there is no evidence the two brothers met or were in contact. That's the diplomatic position - physical proximity without social contact. The Windsors are being managed like a company with a risk-management strategy, not like a family.

The question that remains unresolved: can the British monarchy survive another cycle of Andrew news without triggering serious institutional questions? Because this isn't a tabloid story this time - it's an active police investigation. And every time Charles III heads to Norfolk, the cameras will be there.