Tate brothers lose court bid to be told names of their UK accusers

BBC News ·

Tate brothers lose court bid to be told names of their UK accusers

Andrew and Tristan Tate have lost a legal bid to be told the names of their UK accusers, which the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) have withheld to remove the risk they could be made public. …

Andrew and Tristan Tate have lost a legal bid to be told the names of their UK accusers, which the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) have withheld to remove the risk they could be made public. The brothers will face charges in the UK, including rape and human trafficking, when they are extradited from Romania after legal proceedings against them there conclude. The Tates, who both deny any wrongdoing, sought a judicial review to challenge the CPS's decision to withhold the names of their female accusers at this stage, arguing it breached their human rights. A High Court judge threw out their case on Friday, saying prosecutors had sound legal grounds to do so until criminal proceedings begin. In 2024, Bedfordshire Police secured European arrest warrants for the pair to have them returned from Romania, where they are based and are under criminal investigation. In May 2025, prosecutors confirmed the full list of 21 charges Andrew Tate, 39, and Tristan Tate, 37, will eventually face in the UK. The alleged offences are said to have taken place between 2012 and 2016. While the Tates have been made aware of the charges, the CPS decided it was necessary to withhold the names of their accusers until they are back in the UK and legal action formally starts. At a hearing at the Royal Courts of Justice earlier this week, their barrister Sallie Bennett-Jenkins KC argued that decision was "flawed", and said they had "been treated differently from other suspects or defendants". …

Original source: BBC News

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