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U.K. police examine new information on deaths of Princess Diana, Dodi Fayed

 

British police said on Saturday they were assessing new information about the deaths of Princess Diana and her friend Dodi al Fayed in a Paris road crash in 1997.

 

London’s Metropolitan Police did not elaborate on the information, or its source, but Britain’s Sky news television station said it had come from the parents-in-law of a former soldier and had been passed on by the Royal Military Police.

 

The force said in a statement it was studying information into the deaths that it had recently received and was “assessing its relevance and credibility”.

 

“This is not a re-investigation and does not come under Operation Paget,” it said, referring to the police investigation into the allegations of murder.

 

Diana and Dodi and their chauffeur were killed when their car crashed in a road tunnel while pursued by photographers after the couple left the Ritz hotel on Aug. 31, 1997.

 

The police statement noted the inquest jury had concluded their verdict as “unlawful killing, grossly negligent driving of the following vehicles and of the Mercedes (in which the couple were travelling.”

 

A royal spokeswoman said there would be no comment on the new information.

 

A 2008 inquest in London returned a verdict of unlawful killing and said the chauffeur, Henri Paul, and the photographers were to blame for the deaths.

 

Dodi’s father Mohammed al Fayed, former owner of the Harrods department store, has long claimed the couple were murdered.

 

In December 2006, Operation Paget concluded that there was no evidence of murder and said that driver Paul had been drunk and going too fast.

 

Diana, the former wife of heir to the throne Prince Charles and mother of Princes William and Harry, was 36 when she died.

Princess Diana death: Police probe sensational claim she was killed by the SAS

By Sunday People, 17 Aug 2013 20:58, Source

 

The allegation emerged at the second court martial of Sergeant Danny Nightingale, who was found guilty of illegally possessing a gun and ammunition


New information: Princess Di
New information: Princess Di
 

Police are investigating a sensational claim that the SAS was involved in the death of Princess Diana, reports Sean Rayment.

 

The allegation emerged at the second court martial of Sergeant Danny Nightingale, who was found guilty of illegally possessing a gun and ammunition.

 

It came in a letter to the elite unit’s commanding officer by the parents-in-law of a special forces sniper, known only as Soldier N, who was Sgt Nightingale’s former housemate and a key witness for the prosecution.

 

The letter said Solider N boasted the SAS “was behind Princess Diana’s death”.

 

The Ministry of Defence, the Royal Military Police and the Service Prosecuting Authority have known of its existence and the claim since it was sent in September 2011.

 

The seven-page hand-written letter – a copy of which has been seen by the Sunday People – also makes allegations over Soldier N’s behaviour towards his wife and her family following the collapse of the couple’s marriage.

 

It is understood that the SAS passed the letter to the Service Prosecuting Authority prior to the start of the Sgt Nightingale trial.

 

All references to the paramilitary force were removed by the SPA before it released the document to the court.

 
 
The letter says: “He (Soldier N) also told her (his wife) that it was the XXX who arranged Princess Diana’s death and that has been covered up.”

 

Scotland Yard said: “The Metropolitan Police Service is scoping information that has recently been received in relation to the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales and Dodi Fayed and assessing its relevance and credibility.

 

“The assessment will be carried out by officers from the Specialist Crime and Operations command.”

 

The former Harrods owner Mohamed Fayed has long maintained the car crash that killed Diana, his son Dodi – who was her lover – and their driver Henri Paul in Paris on August 31, 1997, was a conspiracy involving the British state.

 

A 2008 inquest jury returned an unlawful killing verdict.

 

It was a tip-off from Soldier N’s estranged wife that led to a Glock 17 pistol being found in Nightingale’s room at a Hereford house the SAS colleagues shared.

 

Soldier N pleaded guilty to possessing another Glock, a grenade and ammunition. He was sentenced to two years in jail.

 

Nightingale, 38, from Crewe, Cheshire, was sentenced to two years’ military detention, suspended for 12 months, after being found guilty at a retrial last month.

 

His initial 18-month sentence was quashed after a campaign by wife Sally.

 

The MoD said: “This is a matter for the civilian police authorities.”

FM

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