A quarter of a century after the death of Diana of Wales, conspiracy theories continue to fuel legends, such as the princess being murdered or the British royal family involved. A car accident in Paris.
This was finally confirmed in 2008 by the British forensic investigation into the death of 36-year-old Lady Di and her boyfriend. Dodi al-Fayed42 concluded that the tragedy was caused by the reckless murder.
According to the evidence gathered by the police, the blame fell on Henri Paul. The driver of the Mercedes that crashed into the Pont du Alma in Paris on the night of 30 August 1997. when the vehicle is chased by a group of photographers looking for the precious photo of the most famous woman in the world at the time.
only survived couple’s protectionHowever, Trevor Rees Jones, who has never been able to provide any illuminating testimony about this event due to suffering from amnesia, is a case that skeptically accuses conspiracy theorists who realize that they can be silenced.
The jury of this investigation guilty of recklessly killing the “paparazzi” who was following the vehiclefocus at the beginning of the wave of anger directed at the sensational media.
“Queen made”
Worked on these same hypotheses First members of the Paris Crime Brigade who arrived at the crash site, but in the ensuing days all sorts of theories began to spread like wildfire, some driven by an internet in its infancy, and others defended by key figures.
Just 24 hours after the event, Mohamed Al Fayed, Dodi’s father and then the owner of the Harrods store requested a criminal investigation for manslaughter when the Paris Prosecutor’s Office announced that Paul had tripled his permissible blood alcohol level.
a few days later, Lady Di’s funeral was held at Westminster Abbey (London). The princess’s brother, Charles, was charged against the press. The princess’ private burial took place at Althorp House, the Spencer family home in Northamptonshire in north-central England.
The foundations were laidand the most probable doubts take rootAs some of the graffiti visible near the Alma bridge show: “Killer paparazzi” or “Queen did it.”
here it starts A trip down the rabbit hole in Alice in Wonderland, where conspiracy theorists suggest looking for answers to stave off the pandemic, climate change, or Diana’s death.
A hole that’s hard to get out because It’s tempting to think that some photographers don’t really work for mediabut for the secret services responsible for running it, one of the theories British channel Channel 4 is currently investigating in a four-part documentary: ‘Investigating Diana: Death in Paris’ (Investigating Diana: Death in Paris).
Program made in the purest style of the genre’true crime (true crimes), for example, touches on the possibility that attacks on the tabloid press may serve to divert attention from the real perpetrators, as Al Fayed himself has revealed on tape in recent statements.
The Egyptian businessman thus repeats the theses he has maintained for the last 25 years, assuring that the death of his son and princess was the cause of death. “a conspiracy” because they both had marriage plans.
The hitmen will kill Diana
He still does not believe the results of two investigations, the 2006 police investigation and the 2008 forensic investigation. “tragic accident” and reckless murder, respectively.
For example, she continues to cling to a letter published by the British newspaper Daily Mirror, in which Diana’s husband ten months before her death says: Charles of England hatched a plan to kill him in a car accident, where he came to be questioned by the police.
Like this, Al Fayed accused the royal family of the secret services’ plotting to assassinate Diana and Dodi, as their son, whose princess is Muslim, is pregnant.
Accusing finger pointed directly to her husband II. Isabella, the late Duke of Edinburgh.
In this context, the documentary investigates the presence of shooters, Just before the crash, a beam of light emanating from a motorcycle passing a Mercedes, perhaps in the words of a witness who confirmed seeing a camera flash, implied that the flash had caused Henri to lose control.
Another witness assures that he saw a white Fiat Uno zigzags out of the tunnel just after the crash, with a “dark-skinned” man at the wheel and a large, gaping dog in the back seat of the car with broken taillights.
Martin Monteil, then head of the Crime Brigade, confirms this. Traces of white paint and light glass marks on asphalt found on Mercedesalthough he admitted that none of these testimonies produced conclusive evidence.
Be that as it may, the documentary about Diana It has hooked millions of Brits these days, and the princess has proven as relevant as it was 25 years ago, sadly as well as conspiracy theories.
Source: Informacion
