Sunday, December 23, 2007

Diana's Fear of Truth Revealed: Clear evidence of a Plot

The inquest into Princess Diana's death in a 1996 car crash has turned up a most startling letter once again.


The letter, which is said to be handwritten by the former princess of Wales details her suspicions that Charles was having an affair with Tiggy Legge-Bourke, nanny to Diana's two sons.
Diana was convinced that Charles had made Tiggy pregnant and therefore wanted her dead so he could marry Tiggy. Diana handed over the letter to her butler Paul Burrell, who published it in his book in 2003. There's suspicion that the letter is a forgery that the butler may have written it himself.


Princess Diana also frequently spoke about her desire to move overseas and escape the constant paparazzi attention she received in the UK. Princess of Wales confided about her desire to give up her royal duties and move abroad and escape the uninterrupted paparazzi attention she received in Britain, a royal correspondent, who spoke to Diana only six hours before her death, told her inquest on Thursday.


The princess also revealed a desire to start a global charity called the Diana Hospices in her last conversation with the correspondent, says PTI.


London: A senior detective leading an official inquiry into the death of Princess Diana said on Tuesday that new forensic evidence and fresh witnesses have been uncovered by investigators.
Lord John Stevens, the former head of London's Metropolitan Police, refused to elaborate on the findings of the two-year inquiry into the high-speed car crash in August 1997 in Paris.
The crash killed Diana, her boyfriend Dodi Fayed and their chauffeur, Henry Paul.
An interim report was expected to be published this month, but police officials said no date had been set for its release.
Speaking at a literary festival in Hay-on-Wye, Wales, Stevens said his team of 10 detectives had made progress in examining the deaths and a raft of conspiracy theories that surround the crash.
"We have got new witnesses and new forensic evidence," Stevens said, but refused to confirm if any were eyewitnesses.
"I can't tell you at this stage you've already got under my radar," he added.
He said his inquiry has looked at a range of theories about the deaths, including an allegation that Prince Charles was plotting to kill his former wife by staging a car accident.

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