DISGRACED influencer Andrew Tate will spend at least 30 more days behind bars as prosecutors successfully argued for him to remain in jail amid his sex trafficking probe. The 36-year-old former kickboxer has been detained for more than 50 days in Romania as part of a probe into human trafficking, rape, and organised crime. AFPAndrew Tate at a previous court appearance[/caption] ReutersTate is accused along with his brother Tristan[/caption] He and his brother Tristan were taken into custody on December 29. It come as Tate branded prison an “animal house” as he told how inmates brawl with guards in his latest rant from behind bars. In yet another email to subscribers, Tate again complained about life in jail. He said: “In jail, where distractions are so limited, emotions become the entertainment of choice for most. “Inmates enjoy feeling anger. I’ve seen men fight the guards for pure fun. Tate previously moaned about the conditions in prison, saying cockroaches and lice were his “only friends at night”. Tate and Tristan, along with two female suspects, were detained in Bucharest by Romanian anti-organised crime prosecutors pending a criminal investigation. They are accused of recruiting women on social media platforms and persuading them to travel to their £600,000 villa on the outskirts of the country’s capital. The brothers would allegedly falsely claim to be in love with the young women, before making them perform sexual acts on webcams. Women were forced to film porn videos in the compound and were kept under 24/7 house arrest, according to Romanian investigators. Prosecutors also said one of the brothers raped one of the victims in March of last year, which is when the investigation started. Tate has threatened to sue a woman who accused him of trafficking for £249million to “shut down” the case against him. The brothers deny the allegations made against them. One-time Big Brother contestant Tate spent years creating a warped empire promoting toxic worldviews which have infected legions of fans through TikTok. His influence has had a worrying spread amongst teenage boys, with one UK MP saying he is “brainwashing” children.