Dubbed “the backroom fixer”, Mark Gallagher, a former director of corporate affairs and chief of staff at ITV, specialises in crisis management and has been brought in to help restore Prince Andrew’s reputation in the wake of the Jeffrey Epstein scandal. The appointment comes after the Telegraph exclusively revealed that the beleaguered royal had hired Britain’s most respected extradition lawyer to fend off an FBI inquiry into his friendship with the convicted paedophile. He has been receiving legal advice from Clare Montgomery QC, whose clients have included Augusto Pinochet, Chile’s former dictator and Nirav Modi, wanted for India’s biggest fraud. She has been described as “the most formidable member of the bar.” Ms Montgomery is being briefed by Gary Bloxsome, a criminal defence solicitor and partner at Blackfords, who has defended British troops against war crime allegations and is understood to have been appointed directly by the Duke. Mr Gallagher founded Pagefield Communications in 2010, having sat on the main board of Camelot Group plc as group corporate affairs after being Public Affairs Director at ITN.

His firm’s 300 clients have included Airbnb, British Airways, Hewlitt Packard, the World Economic Forum and Budweiser Brewing Group. Mr Gallagher also sat on the advisory board and helped to coordinate the Thames Pageant celebrating the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee in 2012. His private clients over the last six years have included those falsely accused of child abuse by Carl Beech, aka ‘Nick’, including former MP Harvey Proctor and Lady Brittan, the wife of former Home Secretary Leon Brittan. It is understood he is advising the Duke through his private client business, Riverside Advisory. The powerful reputational management has been assembled following a demand by the FBI and US prosecutors to interview the Duke about his relationship with Epstein. On Monday, Geoffrey Berman, the US attorney leading the inquiry, claimed Andrew had refused to cooperate, raising the prospect that he could be subpoenaed to give evidence.