Andrew and Tristan Tate were arrested by federal authorities in Miami as British prosecutors seek their extradition to face dozens of charges, including rape and human trafficking for sexual exploitation. The brothers deny the allegations and are also involved in continuing investigations and legal proceedings in Romania and Britain.
Controversial internet personality Andrew Tate and his brother Tristan were arrested Saturday night by federal authorities in Miami, Florida.
The United States Marshals Service confirmed the arrests but did not disclose the precise grounds.
Shortly afterward, Britain’s Crown Prosecution Service announced that British authorities were seeking the brothers’ extradition from the United States to prosecute them for alleged rape and human trafficking for sexual exploitation.
According to the announcement, the alleged offenses occurred between July 2010 and August 2017. The brothers, who hold both American and British citizenship, deny the allegations against them.
Andrew Tate, 39, and Tristan Tate, 38, were formerly professional kickboxers, although most of their fame came years after their sporting careers ended.
Andrew became closely associated with the so-called "manosphere," an online network of communities and content centered on masculinity, relations between men and women, and opposition to feminism.
Millions of followers, including teenage boys and young men, encountered videos in which he showcased a lifestyle built around luxury cars, private jets, cigars, mansions and immense wealth.
Andrew Tate first gained widespread exposure in 2016 when he appeared on the British edition of "Big Brother." He was removed from the program after a video emerged that appeared to show him assaulting a woman.
Alongside advice about fitness, business, self-discipline and accumulating wealth, Tate repeatedly made inflammatory statements about women and the role he believed they should occupy in relationships.
He previously described himself as a misogynist and embraced the label "king of toxic masculinity." His critics argue that his combination of self-improvement messages and ideas about controlling women helped him reach a young audience searching for success, belonging and a role model.
Andrew has more than ten million followers on X and is known online as "Top G" and "Cobra." He has identified himself as a supporter of U.S. President
Donald Trump and has been banned from platforms including YouTube, TikTok and Instagram over his remarks.
Statements that brought criticism and platform restrictions included his claim that women who are sexually assaulted bear some responsibility for the attack, graphic descriptions of potential violence against women, and criticism of people who seek treatment for mental health problems.
The brothers maintain that their violent and misogynistic remarks were taken out of context or made as jokes.
Part of the brothers’ commercial success came from paid ventures, including online courses that promised to teach young people how to make money through trading, investing and internet businesses.
Participants were encouraged to circulate clips of Tate across social media, helping saturate recommendation algorithms with his short videos even after several platforms restricted or suspended his accounts.
Even before the Miami arrests, it was known that British prosecutors had authorized 21 charges against the brothers.
Andrew Tate faces ten charges involving three complainants, including rape, inflicting bodily injury, human trafficking and controlling prostitution for financial gain.
Tristan Tate faces 11 charges involving another complainant, including rape, assault and human trafficking.
An extradition warrant issued in Britain in early 2024 stated that Andrew was suspected of three counts of rape, four offenses of assault occasioning bodily harm, two human-trafficking offenses and one offense of controlling prostitution for gain.
Tristan was suspected of three counts of rape, six assault offenses and two human-trafficking offenses.
At the time, court documents referred to alleged conduct between 2012 and 2016, while the announcement following the Miami arrests cited a broader period, from July 2010 through August 2017.
Following the arrests, British prosecutors said the extradition request now covers 59 charges in total: the previous 21 charges and 38 new ones involving seven alleged victims.
Andrew Tate faces, among other accusations, seven additional counts of rape, three charges of arranging or facilitating trafficking for sexual exploitation, three assault charges and 19 charges involving indecent images of children and extreme pornography.
Tristan faces two counts of rape, one charge of sexual assault and three charges concerning trafficking for sexual exploitation.
The brothers are expected to appear before a federal court in Miami early this week.
Only a few weeks ago, the High Court in London rejected a petition filed by the brothers challenging prosecutors’ decision not to disclose the identities of the complainants at this stage of the criminal case.
Authorities argued that the women could be publicly identified through social media because of the brothers’ enormous reach and online influence.
The brothers moved to Romania in 2016. In December 2022, they were arrested there as part of an investigation by the country’s organized-crime unit.
Romanian prosecutors alleged that the brothers and several female defendants had formed an organization that enticed women to travel to Romania with promises of romantic relationships and then exploited them to produce paid sexual content.
Andrew was also charged with rape.
The two men were initially detained for several months.
They were subsequently transferred to house arrest and later placed under judicial supervision, which included a requirement to report to the police.
In 2024, a Bucharest appeals court ruled that the original case could not proceed to trial in its existing form and returned it to prosecutors after some evidence and complainant testimony were excluded because of legal and procedural defects.
Returning the case to prosecutors did not constitute an acquittal, and the investigation remained open.
Romanian prosecutors also opened a separate investigation into the brothers and other suspects over alleged offenses including forming a criminal organization, human trafficking, trafficking minors, sexual intercourse with a minor and money laundering.
In May, prosecutors announced that they had expanded the investigation into Andrew and added suspicion of incitement to hatred and discrimination against women.
In April, a Romanian court removed the final supervisory measures imposed on the brothers, including their obligation to report periodically to the police.
The ruling did not close the investigations or dismiss the allegations.
Their lawyer argued that the decision demonstrated that the proceedings against them had rested on problematic evidence.
In February 2025, Romanian authorities allowed the brothers to leave the country, and they traveled by private jet to Florida.
They remained obligated to appear in Romania when summoned and returned several weeks later to fulfill their legal obligations.
Their arrival in Florida provoked an outcry.
The state attorney general announced a preliminary criminal inquiry and said Florida would not tolerate human trafficking or violence against women.
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said the state had received no advance notice of their arrival and declared that they were not welcome there.
There has been no announcement that the inquiry resulted in criminal charges.
A Romanian court had previously ruled that the brothers could be extradited to Britain, but only after the conclusion of the criminal proceedings in Romania.
The removal of their travel restrictions and their extended stay in the United States changed the situation.
Britain has now approached American authorities directly, and the arrests in Miami could allow prosecutors to pursue the case without waiting for the Romanian proceedings to conclude.
The criminal proceedings are not Andrew Tate’s only legal battle.
Four women have filed civil lawsuits against him in Britain, alleging that he subjected them to physical and sexual violence and coercive control between 2013 and 2015. Two said they had been in intimate relationships with him, while the other two worked in his webcam business.
The civil trial is expected to take place next year.
In separate proceedings, a British court ruled that police could seize nearly 2.7 million pounds from the brothers over unpaid taxes on income from their online businesses.
The judge described their financial arrangements as an attempt to conceal tax evasion.