A posthumous memoir by Virginia Giuffre accuses the Duke of York of being 'entitled - as if he believed having sex with me was his birthright', according to extracts published in the Guardian newspaper.

The book, Nobody's Girl, written by the prominent accuser of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, is set to be published next week, almost six months after Ms. Giuffre took her own life.

In her memoir, Giuffre, who describes Epstein as a 'master manipulator', recounts three occasions on which she alleges Prince Andrew had sex with her, including at Ghislaine Maxwell's house in London.

This revelation adds further embarrassment to Prince Andrew, who reached a financial settlement with Ms. Giuffre in 2022, and has consistently denied any wrongdoing.

Nobody's Girl: A Memoir of Surviving Abuse and Fighting for Justice, serves as a testimony from Ms. Giuffre, who died by suicide in Australia in April, co-written with author Amy Wallace.

Giuffre claims she was one of many vulnerable women exploited by Epstein, sharing her experience from when she met Prince Andrew in March 2001 at the age of 17. She recounts Maxwell waking her up, stating it was a special day akin to meeting a prince, and includes details of encounters that underscored a sense of entitlement from Andrew.

In her memoir, Giuffre reflects on an infamous photograph taken alongside Andrew, describing what occurred that evening, and asserts that there were multiple sexual encounters between them at Epstein's residences.

Despite Andrew’s firm denials and insistence that their encounters never occurred, the allegations within this memoir continue to scrutinize his past, further complicating his relationship with Epstein's legacy and the public's perception of the royal family.