Andrew Tate faces escalated charges in Romania for ‘instigating hatred and discrimination against women’

independent.co.uk

Romanian prosecutors have extended a criminal investigation into internet personality Andrew Tate by adding charges of instigating hatred and discrimination against women.

Tate and his brother Tristan have been under criminal investigation on charges including human trafficking since December 2022 but the two probes have yet to make it to trial. Both have denied all wrongdoing.

The brothers, both former kickboxers with dual U.S. and British citizenship, were initially held in police custody pending the investigation, then placed under house arrest.

The measures were later relaxed to regular check-ins with the police. In April, a Romanian court lifted all preventative judicial control measures against them.

Prosecutors cite several speeches in 2021-2024

The Tates and four other suspects are under investigation on suspicion of forming an organised criminal group, human trafficking, trafficking of minors, sexual intercourse with a minor and money laundering.

“The anti-organized crime prosecuting unit (DIICOT) has ordered extending investigations under the charge of continued inciting to hatred or discrimination,” prosecutors said in a statement.

Andrew Tate attends UFC 327 at Kaseya Center on April 11, 2026 in Miami, Florida (Getty Images)

They said he instigated the public to hatred and discrimination against women through several speeches promoted on social media during 2021 to 2024.

“DIICOT in Romania is attempting to charge me with speech violation crimes for jokes I’ve made on my emergency meeting podcasts,” Tate said on social media platform X.

“An American citizen being indicted for speech. See you in court.”

The Tate brothers also have British arrest warrants pending and will be extradited after Romanian trial proceedings finish, a Romanian court has ruled.

Tate faces 10 criminal charges in Britain, including rape, actual bodily harm, human trafficking and controlling prostitution for gain, the UK’s Crown Prosecution Service said on Wednesday.

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