History of crazy rumors. Lady Di was murdered
Princess Lady Di would therefore have been murdered on the orders of the British royal family. Here is what we could hear shortly after his death.
The Princess of Wales is dead. And the astonishment quickly gives way to doubt, to rumors.
Such a fate, which the whole world has followed step by step since July 29, 1981, the date of her marriage to Prince Charles, who may one day make her the Queen of England. There were the births of his sons, the crises with Charles and with the royal family ... Everything cannot end, so banally, in a car accident under a Parisian bridge. Especially since Diana is not the only victim. Besides the driver, there is also Dodi al Fayed, Diana's companion.
And precisely, the first big rumor, it comes from Dodi's father, Mohamed al-Fayed, according to which the assassination of the couple was orchestrated by Prince Philip who would not have supported the presence of a Muslim in his family, especially since the princess was pregnant and about to get engaged. The secret services would have mandated the driver of the Mercedes, in reality a suicide bomber.
By order of the Crown ...
An agent of the mossad would have evoked another mode of operation: the car of the princess was remotely controlled thanks to a computer hack. But still at the behest of the Crown. Absolute proof of the involvement of the royal family, some believed to find it in 2005, when John Hopkins, agent of MI5, admits, on the verge of death to have murdered a great number of people, including Lady Diana ...
A testimony, supposedly, given on his deathbed by an agent of whom nothing is known, illustrated by a photo of a dying person used in numerous rumors of the same kind, and conveyed by a site known for its false information. What's more, Hopkins justifies the order of the Crown on the grounds that the royal family have learned of Lady Diana's desire for a divorce. A divorce actually pronounced three years earlier. The investigations, French and British, pointed to the excessive speed of the Mercedes, the drunkenness of the driver incompatible with the antidepressants and neuroleptics he took daily. Sad banality never mixes well with the exceptional. Lady Di's fate had to be until the end.