Social media influencer Andrew Tate and brother Tristan leave Romania for US

Prosecutors lifted a travel ban related to criminal charges

Social media influencer Andrew Tate (right) and his brother Tristan after a court hearing in Bucharest, Romania, in January. Photograph: Robert Ghement/EPA
Social media influencer Andrew Tate (right) and his brother Tristan after a court hearing in Bucharest, Romania, in January. Photograph: Robert Ghement/EPA

Online influencer Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan left Romania on a private flight to the United States on Thursday and arrived in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, after prosecutors lifted a travel ban related to criminal charges against them, their media team said.

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

He and his brother are under investigation in Romania on accusations of forming an organised criminal group, human trafficking, trafficking of minors, sexual intercourse with a minor and money laundering. They have denied all wrongdoing.

A source with knowledge of the matter said the brothers would return towards the end of March to fulfil legal obligations related to their criminal case in Romania, which require them to check in with police at regular intervals.

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The Financial Times reported last week that members of US president Donald Trump’s administration had pressured Romanian authorities to lift travel restrictions on the Tates, former kick-boxers with dual US and British citizenship.

A US source familiar with the matter denied that the US put any pressure on Romania to drop the case against the two, but acknowledged that Washington had pressed Bucharest to give the brothers their passports and allow them to travel.

Romanian prosecutors said the ban on leaving Romania had been lifted, without saying what had motivated the decision.

“The request to change the obligation of not leaving Romania was approved,” they said. “All the other obligations have been maintained, including the requirement to check in with judicial authorities every time they are called.”

A lawyer representing one of Tate’s alleged victims, a US woman, accused the US of failing to protect her by allowing them into the country.

“This is a slap in the face to all the victims of the Tate brothers, especially the US victim who is not being protected by her country,” said Dani Pinter of the National Center on Sexual Exploitation Law Center.

Romanian foreign minister Emil Hurezeanu denied he had faced US pressure, but said the Tates were mentioned during his brief hallway meeting with Mr Trump’s special envoy Richard Grenell at the Munich Security Conference earlier this month.

Asked if the US would ensure that Andrew and Tristan Tate returned to Romania to face their criminal trial, a senior Trump administration official told reporters that they had “no insight right now on anything related to the Tate brothers” but would follow up.

The Tate media team announced on Thursday that a Romanian court had ruled in favour of an appeal by the brothers, who were first detained in 2022, and lifted the seizure of multiple assets.

“This decision restores ownership of properties, vehicles, bank accounts and company shares to the rightful owners, Andrew and Tristan Tate and their companies,” they said in a statement, adding that some assets remained under precautionary seizure.

The Romanian network to prevent violence against women, which groups 24 non-governmental organisations, asked prosecutors on Thursday to explain why the travel ban was lifted, “so that any kind of doubt regarding the independence and impartiality of the Romanian judicial system be dispelled”.

An initial criminal case against Mr Tate and his brother failed in December when a Bucharest court decided not to start the trial and sent the files back to prosecutors, citing flaws in the indictment.

A British arrest warrant has also been issued for the Tates and they will be extradited after Romanian trial proceedings are completed. The allegations in Britain – denied by them – relate to sexual aggression between 2012 and 2015. – Reuters