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Romanian court lifts judicial controls against Andrew Tate, pending investigation

By Thomson Reuters Apr 6, 2026 | 9:10 AM

BUCHAREST, April 6 (Reuters) – A Romanian court on Monday lifted all preventative judicial control measures against internet personality Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan pending a criminal investigation on accusations of human ​trafficking, among others.

In December 2022, Romanian anti-organized crime prosecutors detained ‌the brothers for a criminal investigation, initially holding them in police custody for months as a preventative pre-trial measure. The Bucharest court of appeals relaxed the measure to house arrest in 2023 and later to regular check-ins with the police.

The brothers, both former ‌kickboxers ​with dual U.S. and British citizenship, have denied ⁠all wrongdoing.

On Monday, the Bucharest ⁠court ruled to remove the obligation of regular check-ins. The ruling is final and cannot not be appealed, the court said.

“This decision confirms what we have argued consistently from the beginning, the case was ​built on questionable evidence,” the Tates’ lead defence lawyer Eugene Vidineac said in a statement.

The Bucharest court of appeals ruled against sending the Tates ⁠to trial in 2024 and sent the ⁠case back to prosecutors after removing several pieces of ​evidence that were “deemed inadmissible”, including initial testimonies from their alleged victims from the ​file.

Prosecutors are still investigating the first case, but in 2024 ‌they began a second criminal investigation against the Tates and four other suspects on suspicion of forming an organised criminal group, human trafficking, trafficking of minors, sexual intercourse with a minor and money laundering.

The brothers had been required ⁠to regularly check in with the authorities.

Anti-organized crime prosecutors declined to comment as they cannot publicly discuss court rulings.

“Today’s ruling restores a fundamental principle: that liberty ⁠cannot be restricted without ‌solid legal grounds. After nearly four years, the ⁠courts have begun to correct what should never have ​happened in ‌the first place,” Vidineac added.

The Tate brothers are ​the highest-profile suspects ⁠facing investigation for human trafficking in Romania. They also have a British arrest warrant and will be extradited after Romanian trial proceedings finish, a Romanian court ruled.

A self-described misogynist, Andrew Tate has gained millions of online fans by promoting an ultra-masculine lifestyle that critics say denigrates women.

(Reporting by Luiza Ilie; Editing ​by Janane Venkatraman)