Why are
the Tate brothers in the US?
Ian Aikman
BBC News
Published
27 February
2025
Controversial
influencer Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan have landed in the US after
leaving Romania, where they are facing charges including human trafficking,
which they deny.
Questions
remain about why they were allowed to travel and what happens next with their
legal cases.
Who are
the Tate brothers Andrew and Tristan?
Andrew Tate,
38, and his brother Tristan, 36, are dual US-UK citizens who claim to have made
millions from their social media empire.
Their online
output was controversial even before their legal troubles, with the pair
attracting frequent criticism over offensive statements about women.
The pair
have an American father who worked for the US Air Force in Britain. Their
parents met in the UK before moving to the US.
After their
parents divorced, their mother moved to Luton, England. The brothers spent time
in the UK, where they built their early careers.
Police in
the UK have linked Andrew Tate to the "quite terrifying"
radicalisation of boys and young men in a 2024 report into violence against
women and girls.
The brothers
were first arrested in Romania in 2022. They are facing separate, unrelated
charges of rape and human trafficking in the UK. Both brothers also deny the
charges against them in the UK.
Who is
Andrew Tate? The self-proclaimed misogynist influencer
What are the
charges against the Tate brothers?
The brothers
had been under a travel ban in Romania for more than two years while they were
under investigation.
Speculation
that they would leave Romania had been mounting ahead of their journey, after
the pair went quiet on social media.
They left
from a Bucharest airport at around 03:00 local time (05:00 GMT) on a private
jet bound for Florida, sources have told the BBC.
Prosecutors
said the travel ban had been lifted, and the pair's US passports had been
returned to them, but investigations into their alleged crimes have not been
dropped and they are expected to return to Romania.
The Tates
have a large US following and are popular figures among some elements of the
American right.
Earlier in
February, some of Andrew Tate's alleged victims said they were "extremely
concerned" by reports that US officials had asked for his travel
restrictions to be relaxed.
It came
after US special envoy Richard Grenell raised the Tate brothers with Romania's
Foreign Minister Emil Hurezeanu at the Munich Security Conference.
Hurezeanu
said he had not considered Grenell's approach as a "form of
pressure". Grenell told the Financial Times his support for the brothers
was evident.
The Tates
have been vocal supporters of US President Donald Trump, while his close
adviser, Elon Musk, restored Andrew Tate's account on X after he bought the
social media platform in 2022.
What have
the Tates and the Trump administration said about the journey?
Andrew and
Tristan Tate have not yet commented on their trip to the US, and neither has
the Trump administration.
Will they
have to return to Romania to face trial?
The cases
against the Tate brothers in Romania are now being rewritten by prosecutors,
who allowed them to leave the country on the condition that they return -
possibly as early as the end of March.
The pair's
request to leave the country was accepted, prosecutors said, but their request
for the charges against them to be dropped was rejected.
The brothers
face a number of civil and criminal legal cases.
They are
accused of human trafficking and forming an organised group to sexually exploit
women in Romania. Andrew Tate is also accused of rape. They deny the charges.
They face
separate, unrelated charges of rape and human trafficking in the UK, which they
also deny. Last year, a Romanian court ruled they could be extradited to the UK
after their case in Romania concludes.
A separate,
civil case has been opened against the Tates in the US.
Separately,
lawyers for four women who claim they were assaulted by Andrew Tate said they
were bringing a civil case at the High Court in the UK for "damages for
injuries they suffered as a result".
A
representative for the Tate brothers said in response that they
"unequivocally deny all allegations".
A separate
civil case in the UK, which the brothers are contesting, accuses the brothers
and a third individual of being serial tax evaders.
What has
happened to their assets?
The brothers
have had their properties, vehicles, bank accounts and company shares returned
to them by the Romanian authorities, a spokesperson for the brothers said.
A Ferrari, a
Mercedes-Benz, and an Audi A5 were among the vehicles released, the
spokesperson said.
The assets,
which were seized by the authorities in the wake of the brothers' detention in
2022, were released following a court appeal led by their lawyer Eugen
Vidineac.
Some of
their assets "remain under precautionary seizure", the spokesperson
said, but described the ruling as a "significant step toward
justice."
What have
Tate's alleged victims said?
Four women
who allege they were sexually abused by Andrew Tate have said they are in
"disbelief and feel re-traumatised" by news of him leaving Romania.
In a joint
statement, the four said: "It is clear that he will now not face criminal
prosecution for his alleged crimes in Romania; he will use it as an opportunity
to harass further and intimidate witnesses and his accusers, and he will
continue to spread his violent, misogynistic doctrine around the world."
They also
urged British authorities to "finally take action, do something about this
terrifying unfolding situation and ensure he faces justice in the UK".
Matthew
Jury, a lawyer representing the four alleged victims, told the BBC the Trump
administration was "interfering in due process" in Romania and the
UK.
He added he
didn't think the Tate brothers would "ever face justice in Romania
now".
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