Saturday, December 21, 2024 - An appeals court in Romania ruled on Thursday that the human trafficking case against influencer Andrew Tate, his brother, and two Romanian women cannot go to trial because of multiple legal and procedural irregularities on the part of the prosecutors.
The ruling comes two years after Andrew Tate, 38, and
his brother Tristian Tate, 36, were arrested, along with the two women. The
four are accused of human trafficking and forming a criminal gang to
sexually exploit women, and Andrew also faces an additional rape charge.
The decision by the Bucharest Court of Appeal is a huge
setback for Romania’s anti-organized crime agency, DIICOT, but it does not mean
the Tates and the two women would walk free as the case has not been closed,
and there is also a separate legal case against the brothers in Romania.
The court effectively returned the case to the prosecutors,
who can now bring forth new evidence to back up their charges, or amend and
change the existing ones. In November, the same court gave prosecutors
five days to amend their case file or withdraw it.
The request for the appeals court to review the case was
made by Tate's defense team.
His spokesperson, Mateea Petrescu, said the court's decision
“confirms the lack of credible evidence or consistency in the accusations” by
the prosecutors.
“The review revealed significant procedural flaws and raised
serious concerns about the integrity of the investigative process, further
undermining the credibility of the prosecution’s case,” she said.
Romanian prosecutors last year formally indicted the
Tate brothers and the two Romanian women, and earlier this year, the Bucharest
Tribunal ruled that a trial could start but did not set a date. All four
deny the allegation against them.
After Thursday's ruling, Andrew Tate said prosecutors “had
years to build their case” and to “tear apart my life … and yet, they have
nothing.”
“They threw me in jail, took my money, my cars, and every
ounce of my freedom. They made me the biggest enemy on the streets, dragging my
name through the dirt with accusations of the lowest, most vile deeds a man can
be accused of,” he said.
“But I never broke,” he added.
In its November ruling, the appeals court ordered some
evidence removed, including witness statements by two alleged victims and
statements by the Tate brothers, deeming them inadmissible.
The same court also said it had identified multiple flaws in
the prosecutors’ case, which had failed to adequately explain the charges
against Andrew to one alleged female victim who is part of the case, and that
the charges against the two female suspects were not properly presented.
Also, the indictment failed to specify the amounts related
to the confiscation of assets in the case, it said.
Eugen Vidineac, one of the Tate brothers’ lawyers, said the
decision was “a significant legal victory” that “rightly determined that there
is insufficient basis to proceed with the case.”
“This decision is a testament to the strength of our legal
system and the integrity of its judges,” Vidineac said. “Let this serve as a
warning to those who seek to weaponize falsehoods: Andrew and Tristan Tate will
not be silenced, and neither will the truth.”
Meanwhile, a British court ruled on Wednesday that in a
separate case against the Tate brothers, police can seize more than 2.6 million
pounds ($3.3 million) to cover years of unpaid taxes from the pair.
Andrew Tate accused the U.K. government of “outright theft”
for freezing his accounts and said it was “a coordinated attack on anyone who
dares to challenge the system.”
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