Andrew Tate, a social media influencer, is reportedly facing a lawsuit from three British women who claim he sexually abused them.
The legal team putting together the allegations before filing a civil action against Tate in the High Court.
The women, now in their late twenties and early thirties, claim Tate, 36, sexually abused them between 2013 and 2016, when Tate ran an online sex firm out of Luton, Bedfordshire.
A British police investigation into complaints made by two women at the time resulted in no charges being brought against Tate, who repeatedly denied wrongdoing.
The British women seeking to sue Tate claim that they have suffered personal injury and psychiatric harm as a result of alleged violent sexual and physical assaults in the UK.
McCue Jury & Partners is representing them in court.
Tate, a former kickboxer, was photographed this week arriving in Romania for questioning after being released from custody last month.
Tate and his brother Tristan were seen on Monday outside the offices of the Directorate for Investigating Organized Crime and Terrorism (DIICOT) in Bucharest, for forensic searches of electronic equipment confiscated during investigations.
After being arrested last year, he and his sibling were transferred to house arrest in Romania on March 29. They had been detained on suspicion of human trafficking, rape, and forming an organized crime group to exploit women since December 29.
Tate was born in America but raised in the English town of Luton before making his television debut in 2016 on the reality show Big Brother. He was kicked off the show, however, after police informed the producers about allegations of abuse at his internet sex business.
In a review, the Crown Prosecution Service stated that there was ‘no realistic prospect of conviction’ after four years of police investigation.
Through his lawyer, Tate said the women, ‘wanted money because I fired them.’
He added: ‘The police understood after the investigation that I am innocent and the police found messages from the girls’ phones where they were talking between themselves… about me.’