Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
Letters
Diana inquest
Friday November 30, 2007
The Guardian
Jon Henley scoffs that little has come out of the Diana inquests that isn't already known (Shortcuts, G2, November 28 ). I wonder if he's bothered to listen to the evidence. For it's now emerged that those connected with the security services were in fact reporting on Diana's movements in 1997, despite denials over the last 10 years. Diana suspected this and frequently changed her phone number.
The jury's heard how shocking the paparazzi's behaviour was on the night. We know how celebrities like Kate and William are pursued, and the inquests provide a valuable chance to address this issue. And it took the coroner's own expert to debunk the myth that the French did all they could to save Diana. A "window of opportunity" was missed where Diana could have been taken to hospital. What of the British police's multimillion-pound investigation involving "12 experts" now?
Katharine Witty
Director of press and public affairs, Mohamed Al Fayed
6.30pm GMT update
Duke of Edinburgh's 'caring' letters revealed at Diana inquest
Fred Attewill and agencies
Thursday December 13, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
Letters from Diana, Princess of Wales in which she thanks the Duke of Edinburgh for his "heartfelt and honest" advice have been revealed to the inquest into her death.
Jurors were read intimate letters between the Princess and her father-in-law - whom she affectionately called "Dearest Pa" - in an attempt to show the closeness of their relationship.
The jury also heard from one of Diana's close friends, Rosa Monkton, who said the Duke had written the princess "kind, intelligent and considered letters".
The father of Diana's boyfriend Dodi, Mohammed Al Fayed, maintains that senior royals had mounted a conspiracy to cause the crash which killed the couple in 1997 in Paris.
Monkton also told the jury Diana was still pining for her former boyfriend, the surgeon Hasnat Khan, from whom she had split by summer 1997.
"It was clear to me that she was really missing Hasnat and that I think Dodi was a distraction from the hurt that she felt from the break-up of that relationship," she said.
In letters from the princess to the Duke of Edinburgh she had written how grateful she was for her advice on her marriage problems with Prince Charles.
Diana wrote: "Dearest Pa, I was particularly touched by your most recent letter which proved to me, if I didn't already know it, that you really do care.
"You are very modest about your marriage guidance skills and I disagree with you.
"This latest letter of yours showed great understanding and tact and I hope to be able to draw on your advice in the months ahead."
The duke's private secretary, Brigadier Sir Miles Hunt-Davis, told the jury he had been nothing but supportive to her.
In one letter he said: "If invited, I will always do my utmost to help you and Charles to the best of my ability, but I am quite ready to concede that I have no talents as a marriage counsellor!!!"
Hunt-Davis said: "There is not a single derogatory term in the correspondence. The general feeling throughout was of a father-in-law doing his very best to help his daughter-in-law resolve the problems that she and the Prince of Wales were having with their marriage."
Michael Mansfield QC, for Mohammed Al Fayed, alleged that the Duke had described Dodi as "an oily bed-hopper".
Hunt-Davis replied: "It sounds extremely unlikely."
The inquest also heard a reference to fears Diana allegedly expressed that she would be killed in an apparent "accident". Mansfield asked: "Did you ever get to hear that in fact the fear she was expressing was that Prince Philip wanted to see her dead?"
Hunt-Davis replied: "I did not ever hear that. And in view of the correspondence we have seen today, I am very surprised that it was even suggested."
Mansfield alleged that Diana's behaviour in the summer of 1997 was "of extreme concern" to the royal family.
"I want to suggest to you that it was of extreme concern to the royal family - in other words, Her Majesty the Queen and His Royal Highness - that the princess of Wales was cavorting on a yacht in the Mediterranean with the son of somebody who was regarded as undesirable."
Hunt-Davis replied: "The divorce was in August 1996. The lady concerned ceased to be a member of the royal family. That is all I am going to say."
Hunt-Davis replied: "The divorce was in August 1996. The lady concerned ceased to be a member of the royal family. That is all I am going to say."
1pm GMT
Diana inquest hears from leading UK policeman
David Batty and agencies
Thursday December 13, 2007
Guardian Unlimited
The detective in charge of the British investigation into the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, regularly asked the French police whether they had uncovered anything suspicious, an inquest heard today.
Detective Superintendent Jeffrey Rees enquired "periodically" whether French investigators had found any suspicious circumstances surrounding the crash that killed Diana and her lover, Dodi Fayed, but did not constantly press the matter.
Thames Valley police's Assistant Chief Constable Nick Gargan told the inquest that the question as to whether the crash was suspicious was a key theme of the investigation.
Gargan acted as an intermediary between Rees and French detectives when working as a police liaison officer based at the British Embassy in Paris.
Michael Mansfield QC, acting for Dodi's father, Mohamed Al Fayed, asked Gargan whether Rees "was constantly asking whether in fact the French had found anything suspicious" about the crash. "That is what he says in a statement he made," the barrister added.
Gargan said: "I don't remember it being a specific point he would bring up without fail, but I do remember that it was a question that he would ask periodically.
"It was a theme of the investigation that people would be asking whether this was suspicious."
Mansfield also asked whether Rees was told about a meeting at New Scotland Yard on September 18 1997 at which Diana's solicitor alleged she had feared she would be killed in a car crash.
Gargan replied: "I'm not absolutely sure, but I don't think I was given that information."
He was also asked why Rees - a member of Scotland Yard's serious crime squad - was put in charge of the British side of the inquiry.
Gargan said: "Everybody involved in this had a sense that it was a momentous investigation.
"It was a real moment in history, and I think everybody decided they were going to put their best people on it."
Mansfield also asked whether Rees was told about a meeting at New Scotland Yard on September 18 1997 at which Diana's solicitor alleged she had feared she would be killed in a car crash.
Gargan replied: "I'm not absolutely sure, but I don't think I was given that information."
On 18 September 1997, following the Princess of Wales’ death in Paris, Lord Mishcon met with the then Commissioner Sir Paul (now Lord) Condon and then Assistant Commissioner (now Sir) David Veness at New ScotlandYard (NSY), in order to bring the note to their attention. He read out the note (Operation Paget Exhibit VM/1) and emphasised that he was acting in a private capacity rather than on behalf of his firm or the Royal Family.
A note of that meeting was produced (Operation Paget Exhibit VM/2). It details the then Commissioner’s view that the facts so far ascertained showed her death was the result of a tragic set of circumstances. The note concluded that if it ever appeared there were some suspicious factors to the crash in Paris, the Commissioner would make contact at a confidential level with Lord Mishcon or his firm. Lord Mishcon agreed with this course of action.
......
However, when on 20 October 2003, the ‘Daily Mirror’ newspaper published the story about the letter/note in the possession of Paul Burrell, Sir David Veness and the Commissioner of the time, Sir John Stevens, reviewed the Lord Mishcon note. As a result of this review and after seeking the view of Lord Mishcon, it was agreed that the Coroner should be informed of the existence and substance of the Lord Mishcon note.
Rosa Monckton admits 'close' link to MI6
By Nick Allen
Last Updated: 2:41am GMT 15/12/2007
Rosa Monckton has disclosed that someone close to her was involved with MI6.
Miss Monckton told the inquest into the princess's death that she personally had "no connection with the security services" but that "someone close to me is connected with the SIS".
The Secret Intelligence Service, also known as MI6, protects British interests abroad.
Mohamed Fayed has repeatedly alleged that its agents were involved in a conspiracy that led to the death of the princess and his son, Dodi, in the car crash in Paris in 1997.
She rejected allegations by Mr Fayed that the only reason she got to know the princess was so she could pass on information to the agency.
Ian Burnett, QC, counsel for the inquest, said that Mr Fayed had stated: "Rosa Monckton was used to discredit my statements about a relationship between my son and Princess Diana. Rosa Monckton established a relationship with Princess Diana simply to pass information she obtained to MI6."
Miss Monckton said: "This is absolute fantasy on his part."
Mr Burnett asked: "It is right that you have someone close to you who you believe to be an MI6 officer?"
Miss Monckton replied: "I believe somebody close to me is connected to the SIS."
She agreed with Mr Burnett that she could not say more because of the need neither to confirm nor deny whether any individual worked for the SIS.
'My husband is planning an accident in my car': Diana's sensational letter is revealed in full
20 December 2007
A handwritten letter from Princess Diana claiming that Prince Charles was plotting to kill her was shown to her inquest yesterday.
In the note, sent to her butler Paul Burrell, Diana suggested that her husband was "planning an accident in my car".
...
The inquest had earlier heard claims that the letter is a fake.
Lucia Flecha de Lima, a close friend of the princess, said the butler was "perfectly capable of imitating" her handwriting.
She added: "I still don't believe in it. I still don't believe she was fearing for her life, especially from Prince Charles, the future king of your country."
...
link
Date Nature of Proceedings Start
Time
7 January 2008 Witnesses: Rodney Turner, Grahame Harding, Colin Haywood-Trimming 10.00am
8 January 2008 Inquests not sitting
9 January 2008 Witnesses: Lee Sansum To be confirmed
10 January 2008 Witnesses: John Johnson, Michael Cole To be confirmed
Past proceedings:
Date Nature of Proceedings Start
Time
Week 12
20 December 2007 Witnesses:
Morning: Lily Hua Yu (read), Richard Kay, Paul Carpenter
Afternoon: Alain Willaumez 10.00am
19 December 2007
Witnesses:
Morning: Deborah Gribble
9.00am
18 December 2007
Witnesses:
Morning: Myriah Daniels, DS P Stoneham
Afternoon: Lucia Flecha de Lima, Myriah Daniels, Susan Kassem
Mr Turner also said the Princess had never seriously suggested to him that she thought the Prince of Wales wanted to kill her.
The inquest had previously heard that the Princess sent a handwritten note to her then butler Paul Burrell in October 1993 saying she believed her husband wanted her dead so that he could marry Tiggy Legge-Bourke, a nanny to her sons.
Mr Turner said "Standing here today, what I find absolutely amazing is the letter that Paul Burrell produced that was a bombshell to all of us and it was something she never discussed."
Talking about a period in the mid-1990s when there was a heightened threat of attacks from the IRA, Mr Turner said the Princess once joked: "If it’s not the IRA, it’s my husband."
Paul BURRELL
Former Butler to the Princess of Wales.
Interviewed by Operation Paget - Statements 24, 24A and 24B
In February 2004, Paul Burrell sent a statement to the Coroner, Michael Burgess. He referred to the ‘letter’ he had received from the Princess of Wales. He stated:
‘In October 1996 I received from the Princess a letter an abridged copy of which I now attach to this statement. In the course of this letter, the Princess makes reference to her fears that she would die in a road traffic accident. The Princess had mentioned similar fears to me on previous occasions and had also mentioned them to Ken
Wharfe, her former close protection officer and I believe to other close friends.’
‘When the Princess had spoken about dying in a car accident, her expressed rationale in thinking that that would be the way that somebody would kill her was simply that it would be the easiest way to do it without arousing suspicion.
When I received the attached letter from the Princess I did not become more worried or vigilant on her behalf as a result of it but took it to be a further repetition of a previously expressed fear.’
‘The letter represented the only document received by or seen by me containing any reference to car accidents and it was, I believe, simply an indicator of the way the Princess was thinking and feeling at that point in time.
Having received the letter from the Princess I did discuss it with her, but it was clear that this was something that she felt when she wrote the letter and which did not preoccupy her thereafter so that we never discussed it again.’
At Kensington Palace in February 1997, the Princess asked her to listen into a phone call she was on in which she was threatened over the landmine campaign, Miss Simmons said.
"This person was saying to her that she shouldn't interfere in matters she knew nothing about," she said.
The caller told the Princess "Well accidents can happen" and she was "very pale" after the conversation.
Miss Simmons said the Princess told her the caller was Conservative MP Nicholas Soames.
Mr Soames, the grandson of Winston Churchill, has previously told the inquest that the suggestion was "grotesque and preposterous".
.an officer of the British royal household who attends or assists members of the royal family
12 December 2007
Witnesses: Afternoon: Raine, Countess Spencer; The Hon Nicholas Soames MP
2.00pm
12 Q. My name is Richard Keen and I am counsel for the parents
13 of the late Henri Paul.
14 Can I ask you this, Mr Soames: in the weeks
15 preceding the crash in Paris in 1997, do you recall
16 a political or ministerial colleague alluding to the
17 prospect of the sudden death of the Princess of Wales in
18 unexplained circumstances?
19 A. No.
20 Q. Perhaps this quotation may jog your memory:
21 "... and still elusive, though occasionally one must
22 assume in the telescopic sight, is the ultimate trophy,
23 the most brightly plumaged of all, to accelerate and
24 then to be the first to capture the sudden death of
25 Diana, Princess of Wales in unexplained circumstances."
85 1 A. It means absolutely nothing to me.
Sir Bernard Ingham, Margaret Thatcher's former press secretary
"I think he was probably the most incontinent minister I have ever come across in terms of security. He was absolutely incapable of retaining any information longer than the time it took to bump into a journalist.
"He was utterly mischievous. He was born completely out of his time, in many ways. He should have been an 18th Century rake.
The late Alan Clark was a colourful character, a modern day Pepys who recorded the affairs and scandals, the in-fighting and backbiting of his time in Westminster. What memories do friends and colleagues hold of the man?
Charming, reckless, irreverent, unpredictable and vain, Alan Clark was all these things. He was obsessed with climbing the political ladder one minute, seemingly willing to risk everything on a whim the next.
Little wonder then that his legendary diaries, covering the Thatcher years, have been turned into a six-part series for BBC Four, starting on Thursday.
His admission during the Matrix Churchill trial that he had been 'economical with the actualité' in answer to parliamentary questions over export licences to Iraq caused the collapse of the trial and the establishment of the Scott Inquiry into Arms-for-Iraq, which helped undermine John Major's government.
At the same time he was cited in a divorce case in South Africa in which it was revealed he had had affairs with Valerie Harkess, the wife of a South African judge, and her two daughters, Josephine and Alison. After sensationalist tabloid headlines, Clark's wife Jane remarked upon what Clark had called "the coven" with the catty line: 'Well, what do you expect when you sleep with below stairs types?', and referred to her husband as an: 'S, H, One, T'.
Clark published his political and personal diaries in 1993 , which caused a minor scandal at the time with their candid descriptions of senior Conservative politicians such as Michael Heseltine, Douglas Hurd and Kenneth Clarke. In particular, they embarrassed former chief whip Michael Jopling, reported by Clark as having described the self-made Heseltine as being someone who "buys his own furniture" (as opposed to inheriting enough of it). The account of Thatcher's downfall in 1990 has been described, by some reviewers, as the most vivid that we have and is now accepted by most contemporary political historians to be the definitive account. Two subsequent volumes of his diaries have covered the earlier and later parts of Clark's parliamentary career.
Following the election of 1992, Clark became bored with life outside politics and returned to Parliament as member for Kensington and Chelsea in the election of 1997. Clark was alone in criticising NATOs campaign in the Balkans.[2][3]
To date he is the only Member of Parliament to have been accused of being drunk at the dispatch box. In 1983 while at Employment he was making a reading of a bill in the Commons after a wine-tasting dinner with his friend of many years standing, Christopher Selmes. The complexities of the bill were too unclear for him to answer questions, and the opposition MP, Clare Short, stood up and, after acknowledging that MPs cannot formally accuse each other of being drunk in the House of Commons, accused him of being "incapable", a euphemism for 'drunk'. Although the Government benches were furious at the accusation, Clark later admitted in his diaries that the wine-tasting had affected him.
On Monday, the inquest in London, which has already seen several twists and turns, is likely to hear more sensational evidence from another man who played a central role in the Princess's life: Paul Burrell.
The former royal butler became a confidant of the Princess after her separation from Prince Charles and she apparently described him as her "rock".
However, he was accused of betraying her when he wrote lucrative books that revealed secrets about her private life. He was not invited by her family to a memorial service to mark the 10th anniversary of her death last year.
Mr Burrell, who has flown in from his home in Florida to attend the hearing, is likely to be questioned under oath on two of his most remarkable claims.
First, he is expected to be asked about a letter given to him by the Princess in which she claimed Prince Charles was plotting to kill her, written in October 1993, 10 months after the Wales's separation was announced.
His second claim comes from a three-hour meeting he had with the Queen soon after the Princess's death.
Mr Burrell alleges that the Queen had warned him that there were forces at work in Britain that could threaten him.
He claimed the Queen looked him in the eye and said: "There are powers at work in this country about which we have no knowledge... be careful, Paul, no one has been as close to a member of my family as you have."
Not for the first time during the inquest, senior members of the Royal Family, including the Queen and Prince Charles, are this weekend preparing themselves for another potentially embarrassing week.
Interviewed by Operation Paget - Statements 24, 24A and 24B
In February 2004, Paul Burrell sent a statement to the Coroner, Michael Burgess. He referred to the ‘letter’ he had received from the Princess of Wales. He stated:
‘In October 1996 I received from the Princess a letter an abridged copy of which I now attach to this statement.
Burrell vows to take Diana's secrets to the grave - despite agreeing to appear at her inquest
By REBECCA ENGLISH - More by this author »
Last updated at 23:58pm on 11th January 2008
Paul Burrell has vowed to take Princess Diana's "innermost secrets" to the grave despite agreeing to appear at her inquest, the Daily Mail can reveal.
The former royal butler has told a family friend he is determined not to be "used" by Mohamed Al Fayed when he takes to the witness box at the High Court on Monday.
Mr Burrell fears the Harrods tycoon's highly-paid team led by barrister Michael Mansfield - whose questioning of the late Princess's close friend Rosa Monckton drove her to tears - wants to use his appearance to lay bare the Royal Family's most intimate secrets.
In 21 years of service, he worked for the Queen as her personal footman before becoming Charles and Diana's butler at Highgrove.
Following the couple's separation in 1992, he moved to Kensington Palace with Diana where he became a trusted confidant.
While he was subsequently accused by her sons of a "cold and overt betrayal" in writing about his relationship with the late Princess, Mr Burrell has always insisted that he published only a fraction of what he knows.
His co-author of A Royal Duty, Steve Dennis, said last night that he agreed to attend the inquest because he firmly believed it was the only way to put an end to the damaging speculation that continues to surround her death.
"Paul is grateful for the opportunity to appear as a witness at an inquest he believes should have happened many years ago,' he said.
"Contrary to some media speculation in recent months, he is not attending to "dish the dirt" or reveal secrets.
"He is appearing in the interests of the truth and the memory of Diana, Princess of Wales, and to assist the coroner.
"Like everyone else, Paul is sensitive to the fact that two boys lost a mother and a father lost a son, and he appreciates that everyone shares a common goal in separating the truth from the myth and the fact from the fiction.
"I think his testimony, from the vantage point of his unrivalled position and trust alongside the princess, will be both significant and compelling."
Mr Burrell, who flew in from his home in Florida yesterday for the hearing, is due to spend an entire day giving evidence and being cross-examined.
ow it is my personal view that the Establishment cannot allow Burrell to record the words of Queen Elizabeth when under oath and in court.
This is an interesting test for my theory about the British Crown, no?
24 Q. Now there are just three other topics that I wish to ask
25 you about. The first is the note that the Princess left
92 1 for you which has become known in these proceedings
2 loosely as "the Burrell note", I am sorry to say for you
3 because it wasn't your note. But this is the note that
4 you refer to in your book and which has already been
5 referred to in passing in these proceedings.
6 Sir for everyone's notes, it is at [INQ0010117].
7 Perhaps I can just read rather than pull it up because
8 the handwriting isn't so easy. This is:
9 "I am sitting here at my desk today in October
10 longing for someone to hug me and encourage me to keep
11 strong and hold my head high. This particular phase in
12 my life is the most dangerous."
13 She then goes on to say that:
14 "My husband, Prince Charles, is planning an accident
15 in my car, brake failure and serious head injury, in
16 order to make the path clear for Charles to marry ...",
17 and so forth.
18 You remember that?
19 A. I do remember that.
20 Q. In your book you locate that in time in 1996. Now do
21 you actually think that that can be correct?
22 A. To the best of my knowledge, I feel that's the right
23 time.
24 Q. Who was it that is referred to in the note as the object
25 of the marriage that Prince Charles is supposed to be
93 1 considering? We have had this before, Mr Burrell. We
2 need to have this.
3 A. Okay. It was Tiggy Legge-Bourke.
4 Q. And the note went on to suggest that Camilla is nothing
5 but a decoy; that's right, isn't it?
6 A. Yes.
7 Q. Can I explore with you whether this note must in fact
8 have been written the previous year in 1995? Can I ask
9 one or two questions about that?
10 A. Yes.
11 Q. In your book and elsewhere, you have made it absolutely
12 clear that there was a time when the Princess of Wales
13 thought that Tiggy was a threat, as it were.
14 A. Yes.
15 Q. Again if I can be forgiven for calling her "Tiggy".
16 There was a particular incident, wasn't there, at
17 a staff party in December 1995 when the Princess made
18 that clear? That's right, isn't it?
19 A. Yes. I think it was the Christmas party at the
20 Lanesborough.
21 Q. The Christmas party at the Lanesborough in
22 December 1995. That is the time, is it not, when the
23 Princess was convinced, wrongly in your view, I think,
24 that the Prince of Wales was having a relationship with
25 Tiggy Legge-Bourke?
94 1 A. The Princess was convinced that that was the case.
2 Q. Do you know where she got it from?
3 A. I think she was advised by a friend.
4 Q. What sort of friend?
5 A. I can't say.
6 Q. You don't know?
7 A. No.
8 Q. Also, if it were October 1996, it would be at the height
9 of her relationship with Hasnat Khan, at the very time
10 that you are going to see Father Parsons to investigate
11 the possibility of marriage.
12 A. Yes.
13 Q. The whole tone of the letter doesn't sound right for
14 that.
15 A. That's your opinion.
16 Q. I am just asking you whether you would agree.
17 A. No, I don't agree. I think -- I still believe that that
18 letter was written ten months before the Princess died.
19 Q. Right. In the statement that you made to the
20 Metropolitan Police, you recognised that you may have
21 got the year wrong, albeit you are confident it was
22 October.
23 A. It is possible. As you have seen this morning, it's not
24 easy to remember dates for every single meeting, every
25 single letter. I had a problem this morning reminding
95 1 myself of when I was married. So it's very difficult
2 sometimes to remember, especially when letters aren't
3 dated.
First, he is expected to be asked about a letter given to him by the Princess in which she claimed Prince Charles was plotting to kill her, written in October 1993, 10 months after the Wales's separation was announced.
No, I don't agree. I think -- I still believe that that letter was written ten months before the Princess died.
20 Q. Either you know when you write this book and you finish
21 with the line, "Sorry, that's between the butler and the
22 Princess", the secret --
23 A. Well, now I am being compelled to tell you. I have to
24 tell you.
25 Q. When you are asked to reveal what it is --
184 1 A. I wish I didn't.
2 Q. -- if I may put it without being impolite to you, you
3 are all over the place. First you say you do know
4 a secret, then you say it could be a number, then you
5 say you don't know. Now you say you do know, but it is
6 two, but actually they are different timescales. Do you
7 follow? I am doing a synopsis of your answers.
8 A. So am I. I am constantly racking my brains to find the
9 right answer.
10 Q. That, if I may put it, is an apt description of so far
11 what you have been saying, racking your brains to find
12 out what you should be saying.
13 A. Not what I should be saying, what the truth is. It's
14 very difficult, 10 years on, to remember everything.
Diana police 'ignored her crash death warning'
By Gordon Rayner, Chief Reporter
Last Updated: 3:11pm GMT 15/01/2008
Diana, Princess of Wales told her solicitors of a plot to tamper with her car so it would crash and "get rid of her" or leave her "unbalanced", the inquest into her death heard on Tuesday.
A note of the meeting was given to British police officers within days of her death in a car crash in 1997, but they did not pass on the document to their French counterparts.
Lord Mishcon, who has since died, noted down his conversation with the Princess
The existence of the note, made by Lord Mishcon, head of law firm Mishcon de Reya, was only revealed six years later, after the Princess's former butler Paul Burrell published a letter in which the Princess made a similar claim.
In a heated courtroom exchange, Michael Mansfield QC, representing Mohamed Fayed, whose son Dodi died alongside the Princess, suggested to Sir David Veness, a former Metropolitan Police commander, that his officers had "sat on" the note because he knew that "the security services or agents of the British state" had murdered the Princess "and you didn't want this investigated".
Mr Veness said he "rejected completely" any suggestion that the Princess was murdered, but admitted the note was "potentially relevant" to the investigations into the Princess's death.
Mohamed Fayed believes his son and the Princess were murdered by MI6 on the orders of Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, to prevent them marrying.
The Princess raised her fears about a plot to kill her during an extraordinary meeting with Lord Mishcon and two of his staff, Maggie Rae and Sandra Davis, during a meeting at Kensington Palace in October 1995.
Lord Mishcon, who was in ill health at the time and has since died, visited the Princess to introduce her to the two partners who were to take over the Princess's legal work from him.
During the meeting the Princess also said she believed the Queen was about to abdicate in favour of the Charles, Prince of Wales and that Tiggy Legge Bourke, the former Royal nanny whom she believed the Prince wanted to marry, had had "an abortion".
Lord Mishcon was so concerned about what the Princess had said that he made a full note of the conversation, which was read to the jury at the Royal Courts of Justice in London.
He wrote: "Her Royal Highness said that she had been informed by reliable sources, whom she did not want to reveal, as they would very quickly dry up if she did, that: A: The Queen would be abdicating in April and the Prince of Wales would then be assuming the throne, and B: Efforts would then be made, if not to get rid of her, be it by some accident in her car, such as prepared brake failure or whatever, between now and then, at least to see that she was so injured or damaged as to be declared 'unbalanced'.
"She was convinced that there was a conspiracy and that she and Camilla Parker Bowles were to be put aside.
"She had also been told that Miss Legge Bourke had been operated on for an abortion and that she, HRH, would soon be in receipt of 'a certificate'.
"I told HRH that if she really believed her life was being threatened, security measures, including those on her car, must be increased."
Lord Mishcon set up a meeting with the Princess's private secretary Patrick Jephson, who said he "half believed" what the Princess said.
Miss Rae said: "It was very clear in my own mind that she thought she was going to be killed." But she admitted the lawyers did not take Princess Diana's fears entirely seriously and did not inform the police at the time.
Lord Mishcon gave his note of the meeting to the Metropolitan Police on Sept 18, 1997, less than three weeks after the fatal car crash.
But Sir David Veness, who was formerly in charge of the Royalty and Diplomatic Protection Group, said he did not pass on the note to his French counterparts because there was no evidence at the time that the crash was anything more than a tragic accident.
Mr Mansfield said: "It didn't need Sherlock Holmes, you don't need to be experienced in the job, that once Lord Mishcon walks through the door on the 18th of September, you knew that this was relevant, didn't you?"
Mr Veness said the note was "potentially relevant", but nothing was done about it until 2003, after another note, written by the Princess to Paul Burrell in October 1995, was published in a newspaper.
The Princess said in the note that: "My husband is planning an accident in my car, brake failure and serious head injury."
The day after the Burrell letter appeared in a newspaper, Lord Mishcon rang the police to remind them of the existence of his own note. The police responded by passing on the note to the coroner investigating the Princess's death.
Mr Mansfield said: "I'm going to put it to you bluntly: This note would never have seen the light of day unless Paul Burrell had published his (note) and you suddenly all realized you've got a problem?"
Mr Veness said: "No. With regard to the future hearings there would have been a review, and it would have been pertinent to consider it in any discussions with the coroner."
Mr Mansfield: "Were you just sitting on this note because you knew full well that the security services or agents of the British state, maverick or otherwise, had been involved and you didn't want this investigated?"
Mr Veness said he "rejected completely" that suggestion.
The coroner, Lord Justice Scott Baker, asked whether it had been relevant to Mr Veness that: "Since the note had been written in October 1995 the Queen hadn't abdicated, Camilla hadn't been put aside, and until the tragic collision in August 1997, neither had Diana?"
Mr Veness said: "Yes, that was of relevance."
The letter that Paul Burrell publishes is in
17 October, you rapidly have meetings and, lo and behold,
18 the Inquest is opened in January 2004, isn't it?
19 A. Yes.
20 Q. And the investigation is not into Diana's claims but
21 into Mohamed Al Fayed's claims, isn't it?
22 A. Yes, but the events were inevitably linked as part of
23 that investigation.
24 MR MANSFIELD: All right.
25 Sir, would that be an appropriate moment?
Then, about 30 minutes into the afternoon he comes back:
When we get to January 2004, there is
2 a new development, which is the Paget Inquiry, and terms
3 of reference given to the main Commissioner Stevens.
4 A. Yes.
5 Q. Now that was somewhat unusual, wasn't it?
6 A. Yes.
7 Q. Whose idea was it?
8 A. I am not privy to the details of those arrangements.
9 Those were between --
10 Q. I want to discover, if you can help, who decided there
11 should be an unusual police inquiry into the allegations
12 made by Mohamed Al Fayed as opposed to the allegations
13 being made by Diana which weren't so dissimilar in some
14 respect? Do you know who took that decision?
15 A. No, I don't.
16 Q. Did you go to any meetings with the coroner in the early 17 days?
18 A. No, I did not.
19 Q. Who was dealing with this side of it?
20 A. In the preparatory stage before Operation Paget --
21 Q. Before the opening of the inquest in January 2004 when
22 it was announced to the world that there would be
23 a Stevens Inquiry into these allegations, who was
24 dealing -- so in other words we are dealing with between
25 October 2003, with the publication of the note, and
140 1 January 2004.
2 A. I believe that was Commander Armand.
3 Q. Again, would there be records of these meetings as how
4 this developed into basically an inquiry into
5 Mohamed Al Fayed?
6 A. I think those are issues that I am not privy to and
7 I would not want to guess that -- they are, I think,
8 questions that you might find more helpful to seek
9 answers from Operation Paget.
10 Q. Yes, certainly. We will.
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