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Adviser to Scandalous Prince Available

Dirty Uncle Albert: Another Prince Finds a Seat at Table of Royal Miscreants

For decades, elite men have relied on silence as their strongest shield — and few silences are louder than Monaco’s. As the Epstein scandal again drags royal privilege into daylight, former Spymaster of Monaco and current journalist, Robert Eringer asks why scrutiny stopped at Prince Andrew and never reached his associate, Prince Albert II of Monaco. When sworn rape allegations, corroborating contemporaneous reporting, and multiple accusers all disappear without consequence, that isn’t justice — it’s protection. Eringer’s reporting exposes how sovereign power, wealth, and political convenience can erase victims, bury crimes, and turn “Me Too” into “Not You.”

As headlines revive scrutiny of elite impunity in the Epstein scandal — including that of the man formerly known as Prince Andrew — Eringer is uniquely positioned to expose a parallel case that never received a true reckoning. Prince Albert II hired him as his Intelligence adviser. Eringer’s recent Substack examination, “Two Peas in a Pod,” goes beyond the familiar royal narrative to ask a far more uncomfortable question: why has Prince Albert II of Monaco remained largely untouched by the broader #MeToo wave that engulfed so many powerful men of his generation?

Pre-order the new book by Robert Eringer, The Spymaster of Monte Carlo

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Eringer notes that Prince Albert appeared unusually close to Prince Andrew, raising questions about shared social worlds and protected circles. Those questions become unavoidable when revisiting the sworn allegations of Elsa Caselli, a French artist who, in 2009, signed an affidavit alleging she was kidnapped and raped by Prince Albert aboard a yacht traveling between Monaco and St. Tropez in 2004. Caselli later reported the alleged assault to police in Nice. Nothing came of it.

Eringer draws on contemporaneous reporting by Forbes, direct email correspondence with Caselli, and her own detailed testimony, which describes isolation at sea, fear, possible drugging, and sexual violence — all followed by silence from authorities. Her account is chilling not only for its specifics, but for what happened afterward: no charges, no public inquiry, no accountability.

The Caselli allegation is not isolated. Eringer also revisits earlier claims made by Dutch supermodel Karen Mulder, who alleged on French television in 2001 that she too had been raped by Prince Albert — a claim widely dismissed at the time. Add to that reports of extravagant sexualized celebrations involving Albert’s inner circle, and a disturbing pattern begins to emerge.

Eringer can speak with authority about how power, wealth, and sovereign privilege create legal black holes — especially in microstates like Monaco — and why certain men escape the consequences that destroy others. At a moment when the Epstein scandal is again forcing institutions to confront what they protected and why, Eringer argues that the Monaco question can no longer be ignored.

Robert Eringer is available to discuss the evidence, the reporting trail, and why some accusations vanish into silence while others finally break through — and what that disparity says about justice in elite circles.

Relevant Article(s) (Check Eringer’s Substack regularly):

RANDY ANDY & UNCLEAN AL – by Robert Eringer – ERINGER

Robert Eringer | Substack

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office | UK news | The Guardian

OPTIONAL Q&A:

  1. How did Prince Albert’s unusually close relationship with Prince Andrew first raise red flags for you as a journalist?
  2. What makes Elsa Caselli’s sworn affidavit so significant compared to other ignored Me Too cases involving powerful men?
  3. Why do you believe Monaco’s legal and political structure allowed these allegations to vanish without investigation?
  4. How does Albert’s continued immunity contrast with the global reckoning faced by other Epstein-adjacent elites?
  5. What role does sovereign power play in shielding figures like Prince Albert from international scrutiny?
  6. Why should the Epstein scandal force a reexamination of Monaco’s ruling family and its untouchable status?
  7. How do the Karen Mulder allegations from the 1990s fit into the broader pattern you uncovered?
  8. What does this case reveal about how wealth, royalty, and geopolitics can override justice for victims?

Paul & Linda McCartney — Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey (Official)

ABOUT ROBERT ERINGER…

In 2002, Prince Albert of Monaco appointed Robert Eringer as his intelligence adviser. He went on to create the principality’s first intelligence service. He currently lives in Montecito, California. Eringer has spent nearly five decades in the intelligence and investigative game. He began as an undercover journalist for Fleet Street and served as a foreign correspondent for The Toronto Star and The Toledo Blade. Infiltrating the Ku Klux Klan was just the start. From 1993, he operated undercover for FBI Counterintelligence in Moscow, Havana, and beyond.

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