There is a shocking top secret FBI file that links the late Prince Philip to two of the sex trap ladies who were involved in the Profumo Affair, which was a devastating spy scandal that occurred in England in the 1960s.
Among the newly discovered documents is a bombshell memo written by J. Edgar Hoover, the head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In the memo, Hoover mentioned that a businessman from the United States named Thomas Corbally, who was involved in industrial spying, stated that there was a rumor that Queen Elizabeth's husband was linked to showgirls Christine Keeler, who was 19 at the time, and Mandy Rice-Davies, who was 18 at the time.
These two women were at the center of England's notorious spy crisis. “Corbally also stated there was a rumor Prince Philip may have been involved with these two girls,” J. Edgar wrote, as per Globe Magazine.
The startling report establishes a connection between the "playboy" prince, who passed away in 2021 at the age of 99, and two scandals. The first scandal involves allegations that he had been unfaithful to his wife, the queen, while the second scandal involves pimps, models, government bigwigs, and Russian agents.
The scandal known as the Profumo Affair erupted when it was found that John Profumo, a married cabinet minister in the United Kingdom at the time, had been having an affair with a teenage siren named Christine for a period of five months, as per Town & Country.
Christine was also having an affair with Eugene Ivanov, a Russian naval attaché. The affair posed a threat to England's national security.
An osteopath named Stephen Ward, who hosted parties that were attended by politicians and gorgeous young women, was the one who introduced the t hotties to Profumo. Later on, Profumo was tried for being a pimp, and he was found guilty of the crime.
Stephen took his own life just a few days before he was found guilty of "living off the earnings of prostitution" and before he had the opportunity to rat out the bigwigs and females who attended his parties.
Mandy was asked during the trial why the prominent politician Lord Astor denied having a tryst with her, and she famously responded by saying, "Well, he would, wouldn't he?"
In the critically acclaimed series "The Crown," which is based on the life of the late Queen Elizabeth, it is revealed that Prince Philip routinely attended several of Ward's mixers. A photograph is displayed that depicts a "mystery man" attending a party as he is facing away from the camera.
The episode speculated Prince Philip is the mystery man at the party as the late Queen Elizabeth confronted him by stating, “Half the time I don’t know where you are, or what you’re doing.”
Business Times has reached out to King Charles for comments.