Prince Andrew is facing renewed calls to meet FBI investigators after the Duke of York's friend and fashion mogul Peter Nygard was convicted on four counts of sexual assault.
Nygard - who once hosted Andrew in the Bahamas - was found guilty of assaulting four women at his Toronto home after luring them into a room without a door handle.
The Canadian designer, 82, was convicted on Sunday after a six-week trial.
Now victims of Prince Andrew's friend, paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, have accused the prince of being dishonest over his claim to want to help them get justice.
Spencer Kuvin, who represents several women abused by Epstein, told The Mirror: 'If Prince Andrew is innocent, he should provide a full interview to the FBI.
Prince Andrew (pictured) is facing renewed calls to meet FBI investigators after the Duke of York's friend and fashion mogul Peter Nygard was convicted on four counts of sexual assault
Peter Nygard (pictured) - who once hosted Andrew in the Bahamas - was found guilty of assaulting four women at his Toronto home after luring them into a room without a door handle
'His continued silence in the face of multiple close friends being convicted of sexual assault – Ghislaine Maxwell and now Peter Nygard – reeks of a guilty conscience.'
Another victim of Epstein's abuse, 35, said: 'Andrew's words were just hollow. It is clear to many he never had any intention of helping any of us.'
Andrew reportedly agreed to a £12million payout to Virginia Giuffre, who claimed she was 'Epstein's sex slave' and said the Duke slept with her. Andrew denied the claims and admitted no liability.
Nygard appeared emotionless as the verdict was handed down after the jurors' fifth day of deliberation.
Prosecutors said he used his 'status' to attack five women aged 16 to 28 in a series of incidents from the late 1980s to 2005. Nygard denied the charges and his defense lawyers branded his accusers 'gold diggers.'
But he was found guilty on four counts of sexual assault. He was cleared of one count of sexual assault and one count of forcible confinement.
Throughout the month-and-a-half trial, the jury heard graphic testimony from all five complainants, four whom said they were in their late 20s when they were assaulted, and one who said she was 16 when the alleged attack took place.
Each of the women ended up in Nygard's private bedroom suite.
Some of the women testified there was a mirrored door leading into Nygard's bedroom and it had no handle on the inside and that two of the doors leading to the outside of his bedroom needed to be unlocked and opened by pressing a button inside the room, or by punching a security code.
Peter Nygard, clockwise from bottom left, Justice Robert Goldstein, defense lawyer Brian Greenspan, the jury, Ana Serban and Neville Golwalla attend Nygard's sexual assault trial in Toronto
Peter Nygard leaves court in a police van, after being found guilty of four counts of sexual assault, in Toronto, on Sunday, Nov., 12, 2023
Two of the complainants told the court they felt trapped inside that room because they believed there was no way out.
One of the women told the court she repeatedly pleaded with Nygard to let her out of the room and that he eventually relented. It was that allegation which led to the forcible confinement charge.
The disgraced mogul testified in his own defense over the course of five days. He said he could not recall four of the five of the women, nor did he remember interacting with any of them.
He additionally claimed any of the allegations of sexual misconduct against him could not have happened because he would never engage in such behavior.
Nygard contradicted some of the complainants' testimony, arguing there was a handle on the inside door of his private bedroom and denying a person could get locked or trapped inside.
Prosecutors closed their case by arguing that Nygard's testimony was inconsistent, unreliable, lacked credibility and should be rejected.
In contrast, the prosecutor argued, the testimony of the five women was consistent, and the similarities of their stories defied coincidence, thereby proving Nygard's guilt.
Nygard's attorney, however, argued that it was the testimony of the five women that lacked credibility.
Brian Greenspan - Nygard's lawyer - told the jury that they needed to carefully consider all the evidence and reflect on the 'fatal flaw and lack of testimonial trustworthiness' of the five women.
This undated handout picture provided by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice on October 4, 2023, shows fashion mogul Peter Nygard's Toronto offices, including a top floor bedroom suite where five women say he raped them
Seen through a police vehicle window, Finnish-Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard leaves a Toronto courthouse in Toronto on November 12, 2023 after being found guilty of four counts of sexual assault
Nygard, 82, was arrested on sex trafficking charges in December of 2020 - he is the founder of one of the largest clothing brands in Canada
Crown attorneys Neville Golwalla (L) and Ana Serban address media outside the Toronto courthouse in Toronto on November 12, 2023 after former fashion mogul Peter Nygard was found guilty of four counts of sexual assault
Kai Bickle-Nygard, son of former fashion mogul Peter Nygard, addresses media outside the Toronto courthouse in Toronto on November 12, 2023 after his father was found guilty of four counts of sexual assault
In addition to the trial that ended Sunday, Nygard is also facing a civil lawsuit in New York that is currently on hold - it involved 57 women and the allegations date back as far as 1977, some of whom claim they were assaulted when they were as young as 14 or 15.
He is fighting extradition to the US for the charges in New York.
He faces a slate of other charges across Canada stemming from other alleged acts of sexual misconduct and assault.
Nygard was born in Finland and raised in Canada and was the founder of Nygard International, which was at one time Canada's largest women's clothing manufacturer.
Before the mogul was arrested, his business employed 1,450 people and operated more than 150 stores in North America and more than 6,000 shops inside department stores.
In 2020, the company began to fall apart when ten unnamed female plaintiffs filed a lawsuit in federal court in Manhattan accusing the elderly businessman of raping women and underage girls at his estate in the Bahamas.
The suit was then expanded to include 57 unnamed accusers.
The Duke of York visited the Canadian businessman at his Bahamas home in 2000, shortly after Nygard settled out of court with three employees who had accused him of sexual harassment.