The investigators’ summary report was first delivered to the Chief of Police and subsequently to Justice Minister Costas Fytiris, who is expected to brief the President of the Republic before any public statement is issued.
After around a month and a half of investigations, the special team of investigators set up to examine the allegations made by Makarios Drousiotis and the messages of the so‑called 'Sandy' concluded that the claims made public could not be substantiated, according to a report by Philenews.
The investigators’ summary report was initially submitted to the Chief of Police and then to Justice Minister Costas Fytiris, who is expected to inform the President of the Republic before any public positioning takes place.
According to the findings of the investigation, all allegations contained in the messages and the alleged conversations attributed to 'Sandy' were examined in detail and were found not to be confirmed. Among other findings:
- It was not established that she had three children with a former judge. Registry records show that she has only one child, with a different father.
- It was confirmed that her father died by suicide, though not in the manner or for the reasons that had been claimed.
- She never worked at the Presidential Palace, as during the period referenced she was employed by a private company in Cyprus.
- There was no indication that she had ever been employed by a company linked to the Rosicrucian brotherhood.
- The photograph showing an injury to her hand was found to have been stolen from the internet.
- The banking document that allegedly showed a transfer of €250,000 from a former judge was deemed to be falsified.
- She never travelled to Germany for protection at a centre for victims of violence, as information from employers, doctors and Social Insurance records showed she was in Cyprus.
- The photograph that purported to show her in Nice next to a Porsche was also found to have been stolen from another woman, who identified the image.
- No evidence was found to support claims of bribery or the payment of hundreds of thousands of euros in return for silence, even after checks of bank accounts.
The only element that appears to have been confirmed was the sending of a threatening message to lawyer Nikos Clerides. The incident was reported to his brother, former Attorney General Costas Clerides, who contacted the former judge named in the case.
The Police are now expected to forward the case file to the Law Office, while responses from Europol and the FBI are still pending.


