Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Unauthorized Autobiography of Princess of Wales by Kathleen McKenna Hewtson The Unauthorized Autobiography of Diana Princess of Wales by Kathleen McKenna Hewtson. Did Princess Diana really die in a car crash? Or was there a bigger conspiracy behind it? According to Anonymous, a hacktivist group, Princess Diana was, in fact, murdered by her own Royal Family. The group revealed some facts which over overlooked in the past during the investigation. The group, which was idle for 3 years, made a sudden comeback and shook the entire world by its heart-wrenching revelations. It revived to mourn the murder of an unarmed Africa-American person, George Floyd, who was allegedly murdered by a Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin, fired from the MPD with 3rd-degree murder. The hacktivists group posted a video on its Facebook Page, demanding every police officer stay within their limits otherwise the country will suffer serious damage. The video went viral, recorded over 2 Million + views in just 2 hours, and is still being watched and shared by the netizens. In the video, Anonymous said, “the murder of George is not even the tip of the iceberg”. And that they have access to more gruesome violence acts by officers and government officials, especially mentioning the MPD. Anonymous: Diana Death by Royal Family. After dropping the video, Anonymous revealed some dark facts about US President Donald Trump, accusing him of sexually assaulting, abusing, and even child trafficking. The documents published by Anonymous were true and they broke the entire world. Another big revelation followed that Princess Diana was killed by the Royal Family itself. In the course of the event, the organization stated that the English Prince and the Royal Family killed Princess Diana. Her in-laws ordered the kill because she, somehow, knew about their ongoing child trafficking operation. Around the time of her death, Diana was visiting hospitals and care homes Jimmy Savile was preying on at all hours of the night, consoled Elm Guest House victims, and recorded palace rape victim testimony. Receipt: https://t.co/hSHAPGB8lv https://t.co/yz3ZqIDoLJ — Anonymous (@YourAnonCentral) May 31, 2020. Princess Diana died in 1997. Princess Diana was pronounced dead after she met with a road accident on August 31st, 1997. She divorced Prince Charles in 1996. And as Anonymous puts it, Diana knew about her in-laws’ human trafficking business and wanted to expose them. Somehow, she met with a fatal car accident and killed herself. Princess Diana Killed By Royal Family: Anonymous. An article was published by TheGuardian in 2002, 5 years after the death of Princess Diana, who quoted that she was indeed in possession of an alleged tape of a rape being conducted within the royal premises. Diana kept it in a safe box in Kensington Palace. She only spoke with her sister about the tape. And when Diana’s sister, Lady Sarah McCorquodale, tried to get her hands on it, it was missing with some other crucial pieces of evidence from the safe. In terms of the hacking group, the tape was last seen in Paul Burrell’s (her former butler) hands which contained evidence of an alleged rape within the royal house and the police were not informed at any given point of time. Anonymous: The Royal Family Ordered To kill Princess Diana. Adding to this, it mentioned, “It emerged yesterday that the 30-minute tape, which has now disappeared, details claim by a royal servant who says he was raped twice by a man who works closely to Prince Charles”. The group mentioned a similar incident took place in Egypt at another royal house. “The alleged victim, who was being paid less than 10,000 Euro, is understood to have left the royal household with a 30,000 Euro payoff.” Anonymous added. You can read more from below. Don’t forget to share what are your thoughts on the Anonymous Princess Diana Murder. Princess Diana recorded the testimony by rape victim of Prince Charles’ staff. #OpDeathEaters https://t.co/m71yKbugif pic.twitter.com/H59tIP43wf — OpDeathEaters (@OpDeathEaters) July 19, 2019. Due to the fact that the media simply didn’t believe Diana had died because of a drunk driver and the mix up of anti-depressants he was using at that time. Conspiracy theorists say that Diana’s death was ruled out months ago before she actually died and that her murder was part of a bigger plan. A Possible Theory Could be:- The father, Mohammad al-Fayed, of her then-current lover Dodi Al Fayed filed a case that the killing was planned by The Duke of Edinburgh via MI6/SIS troops in an attempt to kill his grandson who would eventually rule the Royal Family. However, Muslim half-siblings are not allowed to heir the prestigious English Crown, so they were killed. My Husband Is Planning An Accident. The handwritten note was described to Paul Burrell just 10 months before her death. She wrote, “my inability to work sufficiently would make my husband marry someone else.” The letter was revealed to the public until Paul himself mentioned it in his book A Royal Duty. The Unauthorized Autobiography of Diana Princess of Wales by Kathleen McKenna Hewtson. Did Princess Diana really die in a car crash? Or was there a bigger conspiracy behind it? According to Anonymous, a hacktivist group, Princess Diana was, in fact, murdered by her own Royal Family. The group revealed some facts which over overlooked in the past during the investigation. The group, which was idle for 3 years, made a sudden comeback and shook the entire world by its heart-wrenching revelations. It revived to mourn the murder of an unarmed Africa-American person, George Floyd, who was allegedly murdered by a Minneapolis Police Officer Derek Chauvin, fired from the MPD with 3rd-degree murder. The hacktivists group posted a video on its Facebook Page, demanding every police officer stay within their limits otherwise the country will suffer serious damage. The video went viral, recorded over 2 Million + views in just 2 hours, and is still being watched and shared by the netizens. In the video, Anonymous said, “the murder of George is not even the tip of the iceberg”. And that they have access to more gruesome violence acts by officers and government officials, especially mentioning the MPD. Anonymous: Diana Death by Royal Family. After dropping the video, Anonymous revealed some dark facts about US President Donald Trump, accusing him of sexually assaulting, abusing, and even child trafficking. The documents published by Anonymous were true and they broke the entire world. Another big revelation followed that Princess Diana was killed by the Royal Family itself. In the course of the event, the organization stated that the English Prince and the Royal Family killed Princess Diana. Her in-laws ordered the kill because she, somehow, knew about their ongoing child trafficking operation. Around the time of her death, Diana was visiting hospitals and care homes Jimmy Savile was preying on at all hours of the night, consoled Elm Guest House victims, and recorded palace rape victim testimony. Receipt: https://t.co/hSHAPGB8lv https://t.co/yz3ZqIDoLJ — Anonymous (@YourAnonCentral) May 31, 2020. Princess Diana died in 1997. Princess Diana was pronounced dead after she met with a road accident on August 31st, 1997. She divorced Prince Charles in 1996. And as Anonymous puts it, Diana knew about her in-laws’ human trafficking business and wanted to expose them. Somehow, she met with a fatal car accident and killed herself. Princess Diana Killed By Royal Family: Anonymous. An article was published by TheGuardian in 2002, 5 years after the death of Princess Diana, who quoted that she was indeed in possession of an alleged tape of a rape being conducted within the royal premises. Diana kept it in a safe box in Kensington Palace. She only spoke with her sister about the tape. And when Diana’s sister, Lady Sarah McCorquodale, tried to get her hands on it, it was missing with some other crucial pieces of evidence from the safe. In terms of the hacking group, the tape was last seen in Paul Burrell’s (her former butler) hands which contained evidence of an alleged rape within the royal house and the police were not informed at any given point of time. Anonymous: The Royal Family Ordered To kill Princess Diana. Adding to this, it mentioned, “It emerged yesterday that the 30-minute tape, which has now disappeared, details claim by a royal servant who says he was raped twice by a man who works closely to Prince Charles”. The group mentioned a similar incident took place in Egypt at another royal house. “The alleged victim, who was being paid less than 10,000 Euro, is understood to have left the royal household with a 30,000 Euro payoff.” Anonymous added. You can read more from below. Don’t forget to share what are your thoughts on the Anonymous Princess Diana Murder. Princess Diana recorded the testimony by rape victim of Prince Charles’ staff. #OpDeathEaters https://t.co/m71yKbugif pic.twitter.com/H59tIP43wf — OpDeathEaters (@OpDeathEaters) July 19, 2019. Due to the fact that the media simply didn’t believe Diana had died because of a drunk driver and the mix up of anti-depressants he was using at that time. Conspiracy theorists say that Diana’s death was ruled out months ago before she actually died and that her murder was part of a bigger plan. A Possible Theory Could be:- The father, Mohammad al-Fayed, of her then-current lover Dodi Al Fayed filed a case that the killing was planned by The Duke of Edinburgh via MI6/SIS troops in an attempt to kill his grandson who would eventually rule the Royal Family. However, Muslim half-siblings are not allowed to heir the prestigious English Crown, so they were killed. My Husband Is Planning An Accident. The handwritten note was described to Paul Burrell just 10 months before her death. She wrote, “my inability to work sufficiently would make my husband marry someone else.” The letter was revealed to the public until Paul himself mentioned it in his book A Royal Duty. Princess Diana’s Death. Princess Diana—who married into British royalty, only to later be divorced from it—devoted herself to charitable causes and became a global icon before dying in a car accident in Paris in 1997. When she married Prince Charles in 1981, Lady Diana Spencer became the first Englishwoman to marry an heir to the throne in more than 300 years. Although their wedding was watched by millions worldwide, and their marriage produced two sons—both potential heirs to the throne—it is for her untimely death that Diana is perhaps best remembered. Lady Diana Spencer: From Teacher to Princess. Diana was born on July 1, 1961, to Edward John Spencer and his wife Frances. At the time of her birth, in Britain’s peerage system, her father held the title of Viscount Althorp. Her parents were divorced in 1969, when she was eight, and her father won sole custody. In 1975, when Diana was 14, her father inherited the title of Earl from his own father, who passed away that year. The title has been awarded since 1765, as the Spencers have been wealthy landowners in England for centuries. Her family rented Park House, an estate owned by Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Charles’ mother. During Diana’s time as a child on the estate, she may have played with Charles’ younger brothers, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward. (Charles was 13 years older than Diana.) Although she lost touch with him as a result of spending much of her youth attending prestigious boarding schools, Diana became re-acquainted with Prince Charles after moving to London to live and work in 1978. In the capital, she initially worked as a nanny before taking a job as a kindergarten teacher at the Young England School. The courtship of Charles and Diana lasted several years before they were married at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London on July 29, 1981. With the wedding, Diana was granted the title of Princess of Wales, as Charles’ official royal title is the Prince of Wales. Prince Charles and Princess Diana had two sons—Prince William in 1982 and Prince Henry (Harry) in 1984. Their marriage, however, was an unhappy one marked by extramarital affairs. In 1992, they announced their separation, and they divorced officially in 1996. Princess Diana’s Humanitarian Causes. Diana, who had developed an interest in music and fashion as a child, quickly became a global icon of popular culture as she developed relationships with a number of entertainment personalities, including singers George Michael and Elton John. She was also admired because she used her fame to raise public awareness—and charitable funds—for issues that mattered to her. As a former teacher, she was a lifelong advocate for children and supported efforts to abolish the use of land mines. She also advocated for AIDS-related causes (she was the guest of honor at the opening of the United Kingdom’s first dedicated HIV/AIDS unit in 1987), and she is credited with helping to change the public’s perception of those who suffer from the disease. She famously shook the hands of a patient with AIDS, in front of the media, without wearing gloves, dispelling the notion that the disease is transmitted via touch. After her divorce from Prince Charles was finalized, Diana’s relationship with Egyptian filmmaker Dodi Al-Fayed, the son of a billionaire and former owner of London’s iconic Harrod’s department store and the city’s soccer team Fulham F.C. Dodi is perhaps best known as the producer of the film Chariots of Fire . The couple’s relationship quickly became the subject of tabloid fodder, and they were routinely harassed by the paparazzi wherever they went. Death of Princess Diana. On the evening of August 31, 1997, Diana and Al-Fayed were dining privately in the Imperial Suite at Paris’ famous Ritz Hotel. They had planned to have a quiet, romantic meal at the hotel’s restaurant—Al-Fayed had reportedly purchased a ring for Diana earlier in the day—but they had to leave after 10 minutes because they were being disturbed by the press and other patrons. At 11:30 that night, as they left the hotel to return to Al-Fayed’s Paris apartment, they were hounded by paparazzi, despite the fact that significant security precautions had been taken, including the use of a decoy vehicle, which left from the front of the hotel. Diana and Al-Fayed left the hotel using a rear entrance, with French driver Henri Paul and one of the Princess’ bodyguards, Trevor Rees-Jones. Driving a Mercedes S-280 limousine, Paul took Rees-Jones, Diana and Al-Fayed on a high-speed trip through the boulevards and narrow streets of central Paris. Investigators later estimated that the car may have been traveling in excess of 60 miles per hour. At 12:19 a.m., the Mercedes carrying the couple, Paul and Rees-Jones, crashed into the 13th pillar of the Pont d’Alma Bridge, which traverses the River Seine. They were less than two miles from the Ritz Hotel. Al-Fayed and Paul died at the scene. Diana was taken to Paris’ La Pitie Salpetriere Hospital, but several hours later, at 4 a.m., she died as a result of injuries she sustained in the crash, including a severed pulmonary vein. She was 36 years old. The bodyguard, Rees-Jones, survived, despite suffering significant injuries. He recovered and returned to England, where he works in a family business and has published a book on his experiences with Diana. Princess Diana’s Funeral. The death of Princess Diana was immediately followed by an unprecedented outpouring of grief from all over the world. Her funeral was held in London, five days after her death. An estimated one million people lined the funeral route from her London home in Kensington Palace to Westminster Abbey, where her funeral was held. Diana is buried on a small island surrounded by a lake at Althorp, her family’s ancestral estate in Northamptonshire, England. Investigating Princess Diana’s Death. Initially, the incident had been blamed on their French chauffeur, Henri Paul, who may have been exceeding the speed limit to avoid tabloid photographers. A subsequent inquest on the crash performed by the British police, and released in 2006, ruled Diana’s death a “tragic accident.” The inquest found that Paul had been drunk at the time of the accident, and that his condition may have been worsened by prescription anti-depressants he was taking at the time. In fact, tests of Paul’s blood following the crash revealed that his alcohol levels were more than three times the legal limit in France for drunk driving. Investigators believe this caused him to lose control of the Mercedes. The inquest jury ruled that both Paul and the paparazzi chasing Diana and Al-Fayed were responsible for the crash due to “gross negligence.” The deaths of Diana and Al-Fayed were also ruled “unlawful killings”—the court equivalent of manslaughter. In addition, the jury ruled that the couple might have survived the crash had they been wearing seatbelts. No one was charged in the deaths of Diana and Al-Fayed, as Paul was himself killed. Several members of the paparazzi were questioned immediately after the accident, but were released. Diana’s Legacy. In addition to her accomplishments on behalf of those with HIV/AIDS while she was alive, she is fondly remembered as a patron of the United Kingdom’s National AIDS Trust, an advocacy organization for people with the disease and their families. Many of the organization’s initiatives are named in her honor. Diana is also credited, by at least one biographer, with effectively modernizing the royal family in their relations with the British public. Generally reserved, the royal family, and in particular Queen Elizabeth, have arguably been more engaged with the public since Diana’s passing, visiting with victims of terrorist attacks in London, for example. Her sons William and Harry have also credited their late mother with shaping their own charitable efforts, which include HIV/AIDS and wildlife conservation work in Africa, among other initiatives. Sources: Diana, Princess of Wales. The Home of the Royal Family. A Family History. Spencer of Althorp. How Princess Diana changed attitudes to Aids. BBC News. Diana death a ‘tragic accident.’ BBC News. Princess Diana’s Life and Legacy. ABC News. Biography of Diana, Princess of Wales. Princess Diana (born Diana Frances Spencer; July 1, 1961–August 31, 1997) was the consort of Charles, Prince of Wales. She was the mother of Prince William, currently in line for the throne after his father, Diane's former husband, and of Prince Harry. Diana was also known for her charity work and her fashion image. Fast Facts: Diana, Princess of Wales. Known For: Diana became a member of the British royal family when she married Charles, Prince of Wales, in 1981. Also Known As: Diana Frances Spencer, Lady Di, Princess Diana Born: July 1, 1961 in Sandringham, England Parents: John Spencer and Frances Spencer Died: August 31, 1997 in Paris, France Spouse: Charles, Prince of Wales (m. 1981–1996) Children: Prince William (William Arthur Philip Louis), Prince Harry (Henry Charles Albert David) Early Life. Diana Frances Spencer was born on July 1, 1961, in Sandringham, England. Although she was a member of the British aristocracy, she was technically a commoner, not a royal. Diana's father was John Spencer, Viscount Althorp, a personal aide to King George VI and to Queen Elizabeth II. Her mother was the Honourable Frances Shand-Kydd. Diana's parents divorced in 1969. Her mother ran away with a wealthy heir, and her father gained custody of the children. He later married Raine Legge, whose mother was Barbara Cartland, a romance novelist. Childhood and Schooling. Diana grew up practically next door to Queen Elizabeth II and her family, at Park House, a mansion next to the Sandringham estate of the royal family. Prince Charles was 12 years older, but Prince Andrew was closer to her age and was a childhood playmate. After Diana's parents divorced, her father gained custody of her and her siblings. Diana was educated at home until she was 9 and was then sent to Riddlesworth Hall and West Heath School. Diana did not get along well with her stepmother, nor did she do well in school. Instead, she found an interest in ballet and, according to some reports, Prince Charles, whose picture she had on the wall of her room at school. When Diana was 16, she met Prince Charles again. He had dated her older sister Sarah. She made some impression on him, but she was still too young for him to date. After she dropped out of West Heath School at 16, she attended a finishing school in Switzerland, Chateau d'Oex. She left after a few months. Marriage to Prince Charles. After Diana left school, she moved to London and worked as a housekeeper, nanny, and kindergarten teacher's aide. She lived in a house purchased by her father and had three roommates. In 1980, Diana and Charles met again when she went to visit her sister, whose husband worked for the queen. They began to date, and six months later Charles proposed. The two were married on July 29, 1981, in a much-watched wedding that's been called the "wedding of the century." Diana was the first British citizen to marry the heir to the British throne in almost 300 years. Diana immediately began making public appearances despite her reservations about being in the public eye. One of her first official visits was to the funeral of Princess Grace of Monaco. Diana soon became pregnant, giving birth to Prince William (William Arthur Philip Louis) on June 21, 1982, and then to Prince Harry (Henry Charles Albert David) on September 15, 1984. Early in their marriage, Diana and Charles were publicly affectionate. By 1986, however, their time apart and coolness when together were obvious. The 1992 publication of Andrew Morton's biography of Diana revealed the story of Charles' long affair with Camilla Parker Bowles and alleged that Diana had made several suicide attempts. In February 1996, Diana announced that she had agreed to a divorce. Divorce and Life After. The divorce was finalized on August 28, 1996. Settlement terms reportedly included about $23 million for Diana plus $600,000 per year. She and Charles would both be active in their sons' lives. Diana continued to live at Kensington Palace and was permitted to retain the title Princess of Wales. At her divorce, she also gave up most of the charities she'd been working with, limiting herself to only a few causes: homelessness, AIDS, leprosy, and cancer. In 1996, Diana became involved in a campaign to ban landmines. She visited several nations in her involvement with the anti-landmine campaign, an activity more political than the norm for the British royal family. In early 1997, Diana was linked romantically with the 42-year-old playboy "Dodi" Fayed (Emad Mohammed al-Fayed). His father, Mohammed al-Fayed, owned Harrod's department store and the Ritz Hotel in Paris, among other properties. Death. On August 30, 1997, Diana and Fayed left the Ritz Hotel in Paris, accompanied in a car by a driver and Dodi's bodyguard. They were pursued by paparazzi. Just after midnight, the car spun out of control in a Paris tunnel and crashed. Fayed and the driver were killed instantly; Diana died later in a hospital despite efforts to save her. The bodyguard survived despite critical injuries. The world quickly reacted. First came horror and shock. Blame was next, much of which was directed at the paparazzi who were following the princess's car and from whom the driver was apparently trying to escape. Later tests showed the driver had been well over the legal alcohol limit, but immediate blame was placed on the photographers and their seemingly incessant quest to capture images of Diana that could be sold to the press. Then came an outpouring of sorrow and grief. The Spencers, Diana's family, established a charitable fund in her name, and within a week $150 million in donations had been raised. Princess Diana's funeral on September 6 drew worldwide attention. Millions turned out to line the path of the funeral procession. Legacy. In many ways, Diana and her life story paralleled much in popular culture. She was married near the beginning of the 1980s, and her fairy-tale wedding, complete with a glass coach and a dress that could not quite fit inside, was in sync with the ostentatious wealth and spending of the 1980s. Her struggles with bulimia and depression shared so publicly in the press were also typical of the 1980s' focus on self-help and self-esteem. That she seemed to have finally begun to transcend many of her problems made her loss seem all the more tragic. The 1980s realization of the AIDS crisis was one in which Diana played a significant part. Her willingness to touch and hug AIDS sufferers—at a time when many in the public wanted to quarantine those with the disease based on irrational and uneducated fears of easy communicability— helped change how AIDS patients were treated. Today, Diana is still remembered as the "People's Princess," a woman of contradictions who was born into wealth yet seemed to have a "common touch"; a woman who struggled with her self-image yet was a fashion icon; a woman who sought attention but often stayed at hospitals and other charity sites long after the press had left. Her life has been the subject of numerous books and films, including "Diana: Her True Story," "Diana: Last Days of a Princess," and "Diana, 7 Days." Queen Victoria. Victoria (1819-1901) was queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1837–1901) and empress of India (1876–1901). She was the last of the House of Hanover and gave her name to an era, the Victorian Age. During her reign the English monarchy took on its modern ceremonial character. She and her husband, Prince Consort Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, had nine children, through whose marriages were descended many of the royal families of Europe. Profile. British royalty. Queen of Great Britain (1837–1901) and (from 1876) Empress of India, born in London, United Kingdom, the only child of George III’s fourth son, Edward, and Victoria Maria Louisa of Saxe-Coburg, sister of Leopold, King of the Belgians. Taught by Lord Melbourne, her first prime minister, she had a clear grasp of constitutional principles and the scope of her own prerogative, which she resolutely exercised in 1839 by setting aside the precedent which decreed dismissal of the current ladies of the bedchamber, thus causing Peel not to take up office as prime minister. In 1840 she married Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, and had four sons and five daughters. Did you know? Victoria's 63-year reign is the longest of any female monarch in history. Her great-great-granddaugther, England's current Queen Elizabeth II, surpassed Victoria's record in September 2015. Strongly influenced by her husband, with whom she worked in closest harmony, after his death (1861) she went into lengthy seclusion, neglecting many duties, which brought her unpopularity and motivated a republican movement. But with her recognition as Empress of India, and the celebratory golden (1887) and diamond (1897) jubilees, she rose high in her subjects’ favor, and increased the prestige of the monarchy. She had strong preferences for certain prime ministers (notably Melbourne and Disraeli) over others (notably Peel and Gladstone), but following the advice of Albert did not press these beyond the bounds of constitutional propriety. At various points in her long reign she exercised some influence over foreign affairs, and the marriages of her children had important diplomatic, as well as dynastic implications in Europe. She died at Cowes, Isle of Wight, England, UK, and was succeeded by her son as Edward VII. Her reign, the longest in English history, saw advances in industry, science (Darwin’s theory of evolution), communications (the telegraph, popular press), and other forms of technology; the building of the railways and the London Underground, sewers, and power distribution networks; bridges and other engineering feats; a vast number of inventions; a greatly expanded empire; unequal growth of wealth, with class differences to the fore; tremendous poverty; increase in urban populations, with the growth of great cities like Manchester, Leeds, and Birmingham; increased literacy; and great civic works, often funded by industrial philanthropists.