Romanian prosecutors have sent social media influencer Andrew Tate, his brother Tristan, and two other suspects to trial on charges of human trafficking and forming a criminal gang to sexually exploit women.
Key points:
- Andrew Tate has been charged along with his brother Tristan and two Romanian female suspects
- The four were held in police custody, before being put under house arrest in March
- A spokesperson for Mr Tate says the trial is an opportunity to “demonstrate innocence”
The American-born Tate brothers and two Romanian female suspects are under house arrest, pending a criminal investigation for abuses committed against seven women — accusations they have denied.
The four were held in police custody from December 29 until March 31, before a Bucharest court put them under house arrest.
Andrew Tate was also charged with raping one of the victims, while his brother Tristan was charged with instigating others to violence.
A spokesperson for Mr Tate said “we embrace” the opportunity a planned trial presented to “demonstrate innocence”.
The trial will not start immediately.
Last Tuesday, Romania’s DIICOT anti-organised crime prosecuting unit notified the Tate brothers that the human trafficking charge had changed to trafficking in continued form, a DIICOT spokesperson said.
Under Romanian law, trafficking of adults carries a prison sentence of up to 10 years.
One more victim was added to the case, which started out with six women, the spokesperson said.
The Tate brothers’ legal team said Tuesday’s changes were in the suspects’ “legal interest”.
“The legal framework has been revised and altered to ensure an impartial investigation is upheld,” they said in a statement.
DIICOT prosecutors also said they had opened a separate criminal investigation against a Romanian man close to the Tate brothers on allegations of human trafficking and forming a criminal crime group to sexually exploit seven women.
Prosecutors have said Vlad Obuzic, whose social media platforms show pictures of him with the Tate brothers, and two other suspects recruited their alleged victims by seducing them and falsely claiming to want a relationship or marriage.
The victims were then coerced to produce pornographic content for social media sites, with the suspects keeping most of the gains.
“To ensure the victims’ loyalty and that they will perform only to the benefit of the members of the group, they were forced to tattoo the name or face of the group member exploiting them,” prosecutors said in a statement.
Reuters