
Members of the Royal Family are reportedly “worried” about a significant development concerning Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and Sarah Ferguson. Andrew, 65, and Sarah, 66, are facing imminent eviction from Royal Lodge following the controversy surrounding their ties to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
According to Royal authority Robert Jobson, certain family members have grown deeply troubled about the psychological wellbeing of both Sarah and Andrew. Throughout the controversy, Andrew has lost his Royal designations, his prince status and faces removal from his 30-room estate.
Sarah witnessed numerous charitable organizations previously linked to her sever connections, and, similar to her former spouse, was also deprived of her York designation.
When questioned about whether the former pair are coping amid the most recent wave of coverage, Mr Jobson responded: “Not very well don’t think”.
Speaking on The Sun’s YouTube channel, Mr Jobson then revealed that certain Royal Family members have developed anxiety for Andrew and Sarah.
He stated: “I think even members of the Royal Family who have taken action are concerned about both their mental health.
“I think that, most of all, you’ve got to be concerned about the victims of the Epstein scandal, and that to me is the biggest worry. They’re human beings; a lot has been taken away.”
This emerges just several weeks after reports surfaced that Sarah had allegedly been “pouring her heart out” to employees at a private pub near Royal Lodge.
A source told The Sun that Andrew and Sarah have been “heard having some pretty intense conversations about what is going on”, leaving Sarah “panicking about what comes next”.
The source added that Sarah is “not in a good place” and is “massively on edge”, confiding in friends and staff.
They revealed: “It is probably far-fetched but she is s***-scared and massively on edge.
“Luckily Sarah has quite a few staff left working for her who really like her, and she is really leaning on them for support… she drinks in there with friends and staff to escape from what is going on in her life generally. And while she is there, she takes advice on what to do next.”



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