AMU Homeland Security Intelligence

New Allegations of Murder Lead to Another Look Into Princess Diana’s Death

Brett Daniel Shehadey
Special Contributor for In Homeland Security

According to open media sources, the Royal Military Police passed on to Scotland Yard new allegations that Princess Diana was murdered. The claims were turned in by the in-laws from a letter of an SAS sniper Sgt. Danny Nightingale (convicted on an illegal weapons charge) boasting the SAS was behind the deaths. His wife’s parents were told that the unit “arranged” and “covered up” the hit. Met Police are following up.

On August 31, 1997, Princess Diana, Dodi Fayed and Henri Paul were killed in a car crash in Paris, France. Official investigations of both French and British authorities deemed this an accident. They all cited that the Henri Paul, their driver, was drunk and driving too fast when in the Pont de l’Alma tunnel they hit a pillar. Also that Diana did not have her seat-belt on. They were being chased by the paparazzi. Trevor Rees-Jones, the bodyguard, was badly injured and the only one to survive the wreck.

Egyptian billionaire Mohamed Fayed has claimed that the British Royal Family had MI6 kill his son Dodi and lover Diana in order to prevent any members from marrying a Muslim. Conspiracy theories and dark speculation have repeatedly searched for a more organized reason making sense of the death of the Princess of Wales.

Four years before her death, Princess Diana supposedly expressed her fears in 1993 though a handwritten letter to her butler Paul Burrel: “I am sitting here at my desk today in October, longing for someone to hug me and encourage me to keep strong and hold my head high. This particular phase in my life is the most dangerous – my husband is planning ‘an accident’ in my car, brake failure and serious head injury in order to make the path clear for him to marry Tiggy. Camilla is nothing but a decoy, so we are all being used by the man in every sense of the word.”

The official reports have never satisfied the people’s frustration and curiosity. This new investigation, 16 years later, may do little justice.

Operation Paget, 2004-2006, was led by now ex-Metropolitan Police Commissioner Lord Stevens and determined that there was no murder.

In 2007, a 90-day probe headed by Lord Justice Scott Baker at the Royal Courts of Justice found “negligent driving” to be the cause as well.

The coroner inquiry in 2008 held that there was no evidence to contradict an accidental death.
Scotland Yard has state that: “The Metropolitan Police Service is scoping information that has recently been received in relation to the deaths and assessing its relevance and credibility. The assessment will be carried out by officers from the specialist crime and operations command. This is not a reinvestigation and does not come under Operation Paget.”

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