Breaking
Queiroz leaves Ghana following World Cup exit Rodríguez defends Venezuela’s emergency earthquake response as number of bodies expected to soar Australia give improved England plenty to ponder one year out from Ashes Jannik Sinner swats aside Mochizuki to reach Wimbledon quarter-finals How Osaka pulled off the upset over Sabalenka -- a... ‘They’ve tried to kill me for 23 years’: Cristiano Ronaldo says this World Cup will be his last Troy keeps season alive, ousts Ole Miss at MCWS Could Farage quit? Questions swirl over Reform UK leader’s future At least 25 people die in US as record heatwave scorches swaths of country National Guard members on patrol in Memphis fatally shoot man during pursuit, police say
NEWSREEL
The day, in 30-second reels.
--:--:--
Business / Reel
Business · Video brief

UK police investigate allegations of child sex abuse dating back to 1980s after Epstein file release

The release of the Epstein files has prompted UK police to investigate child sex abuse allegations from the 1980s. Surrey police are examining two cases, with potential connections to Epstein's network. This investigation involves multiple...

AP News· May 19, 2026 · 8:56 PM · 6 views

The release of the Epstein files has prompted UK police to investigate child sex abuse allegations from the 1980s. Surrey police are examining two cases, with potential connections to Epstein's network. This investigation involves multiple police forces and has even affected the British royal family. #EpsteinFiles #UKNews #PoliceInvestigation #ChildAbuse #RoyalFamily

Originally reported by AP News. Read the full story →

More in Business

Business Busin
Business

EasyJet agrees to £5bn takeover by US investment firm

The Guardian· 5 hours ago
Business Busin
Business

Far-right Alternative for Germany party elects leaders as protesters and police clash

AP News· 1 day ago
Business Busin
Business

The Guardian view on Labour’s next chancellor: send for Ed Miliband | Editorial

The Guardian· 2 days ago

0 Comments

No comments yet. Be the first.