Sarah Ferguson, the former Duchess of York, has been plunged into fresh humiliation after she was formally stripped of her Freedom of the City of York.
The city’s councillors unanimously voted tonight in favour of a motion to revoke ‘York’s highest honour’ following the latest revelations over her friendship with billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
The move comes four years after her ex-husband, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, was stripped of his own freedom of the historic city and five months after she lost her Duchess of York title when Andrew finally relinquished his Duke of York title over his links to Epstein.
Ms Ferguson and Andrew, both 66, were given the Freedom of the City of York honour as a wedding present when they visited the city in 1987.
Andrew was said by Labour MP for York Central Rachael Maskell to be the ‘first to ever have their freedom removed’ by the city.
It came shortly after revelations that he paid a multi-million-pound out-of-court settlement to trafficking victim Virginia Giuffre, who claims the then-prince had sex with her three times when she was a teenager.
Ms Giuffre was said to have been introduced to the prince by Epstein’s long-time fixer Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking.
In recent months, Ms Ferguson’s own relationship with Epstein has made headlines following the release of millions of pages relating to the paedophile known as the ‘Epstein files.’
The former Duchess of York has had her Freedom of the City of York revoked following a meeting of the city’s councillors
The move came four years after her ex-husband, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, faced the same fate over his links to Jeffrey Epstein
In one message, Ms Ferguson asked Epstein, who supported her financially for years, to ‘just marry me’.
The messages were sent in 2009, a year after Epstein was convicted in Florida of soliciting sex from a minor.
Speaking during the debate at York’s Guildhall on Thursday evening, Liberal Democrat councillor Darryl Smalley said: ‘We now know, following the release of thousands of documents, that Sarah Ferguson too had a close friendship with Epstein, which continued well beyond his conviction.
‘We don’t expect recipients of York’s highest honour to be saints. We simply do not want them to be best friends of convicted paedophiles.
‘We stand with victims. We stand for the rule of the rule of law. We stand for decency.’
Gwen Swinburn, a member of the public, addressed councillors during the debate.
She said: ‘The decision before you tonight is whether to remove the freedom of the city from Ms Ferguson.
‘It should not be a difficult one. It is the absolute minimum you should be doing.’
Councillor Claire Douglas, leader of the Labour group on the local authority, added: ‘As the people of York would expect, holding this status requires upholding the values and behaviours consistent with such an honour.
‘Those who continued to associate with Jeffrey Epstein after his crimes became widely known fall well short of these expectations.
‘Sarah Ferguson falls into this category as the Epstein files have shown. I therefore call on council to support the motion as presented.’
The Freedom of the City of York is a historic honorary status dating back to the 13th century.
It once had trade advantages but is now largely symbolic and grants holders with the right to join the Gild of Freemen of York, who take an interest in the affairs of the city.
The former duchess has not been seen in public since December.
This is a breaking news story.
