This week on Consider This, the former Prince Andrew, the brother of King Charles,
is arrested, the first senior royal to be arrested since the 1600s.
It's in connection with an investigation stemming from the Epstein files.
What will this case mean in the story of this ongoing fallout of the Epstein files here in the US?
This week on Consider This.
You can listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
Live from NPR News in Washington on Corva Coleman,
there's new NPR reporting on the Justice Department's Epstein files.
This reveals a fuller picture of how sex offenders Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell used a Michigan arts camp in the 1990s to prey on young girls.
NPR's Ava Berger has more.
According to files released by the DOJ,
Epstein donated more than $400,000 to Interlochen Center for the Arts.
That included an on-campus lodge.
He and Maxwell used it during brief stays for several summers between 1994 and 2000.
They reportedly walked their small dog around campus,
using it as an icebreaker to meet two young teenage girls.
One of them, now an adult, spoke to NPR on the condition of anonymity.
She said she experienced, quote, grooming behavior while unsupervised at Epstein's Lodge.
Former administrator Russ McMahon described the campus as open and welcoming at the time.
In hindsight, Today, the campus has significantly increased security.