Princess Diana Knew She Will Die in Car Crash 2 Years Before the Accident, Chilling Note Reveals

Princess Diana Knew She Will Die in Car Crash 2 Years Before the Accident, Chilling Note Reveals
According to the chilling revelation covered in the new Discovery+ docuseries, 'The Diana Investigations,' Princess Diana prophesied she would pass away in a car accident two years before it happened. VINCENT AMALVY/AFP via Getty Images

Princess Diana anticipated dying in a car crash two years before her tragic accident.

The forthcoming Discovery+ docuseries, 'The Diana Investigations,' of which The Daily Beast was able to secure a peek, goes into great detail about the terrifying revelation, which became known as the "Mishcon Note."

Princess Diana's Note Indicated She Predicted Car Accident

Princess Diana wanted to "inform him about something that was on her mind" when she asked Victor Mishcon for a private meeting in October 1995. The Princess of Wales supposedly indicated reliable sources, whom she would not name, had told her that a vehicle accident would be staged, and Princess Diana apparently predicted she would either end up dead or be gravely hurt, according to Mishcon's detailed notes of their talk.

Princess Diana, along with her partner Dodi Al-Fayed, and her driver Henri Paul, perished in August 1997 after Paul rammed their Mercedes into a pillar at 65 mph in Paris' Pont de l'Alma tunnel. Princess Diana forecasted her tragic car crash in what has come to be known as the "Mishcon Note."

In addition to being under the influence of alcohol and prescription medications, Paul was also dodging the obstinate photographers who were pursuing them on motorcycles. The experts in the documentary claim that Mishcon provided Sir Paul Condon, the Metropolitan Police commissioner in London at the time, with the note he took during his encounter with Princess Diana.

It wasn't until after Condon's replacement, John Stevens, inherited the office that the public was made aware of the note's existence since Condon had locked it away in a safe. She purportedly said that "reliable sources" had told her "that a car crash would be staged."

In August 1997, Princess Diana passed away in Paris. Two months after divorcing Prince Charles, Princess Diana supposedly sent a second letter in October 1996 that mirrored a similar prediction. Paul Burrell, Princess Diana's butler, wrote about it in his 2003 book 'A Royal Duty.' 'The Diana Investigations' debuts on Discovery+ on August 18, as per Page Six.

Princess Diana Could've Been Alive Until Now, Says Former Bodyguard

Meanwhile, a former bodyguard for Princess Diana, whom she dubbed "Rambo" after the action hero from the 1980s, claims he thinks she would have survived if he had been on duty the night she passed away.

The 60-year-old Lee Sansum spoke candidly to The Sun in an interview on the night the queen and Dodi Fayed were killed in a car accident in Paris on August 31, 1997. He talked about how no one in the car was using a seatbelt, which was something he usually insisted on.

And, 25 years later, the former Military Police Officer recounts how he could've been with the princess that weekend, and in the car with them. Lee, an ex-Royal Military Police officer, martial arts champion, private military contractor, and expert in close protection stated that the family was required to wear seatbelts by Mohamed Al-Fayed.

Lee worked with the affluent and famous throughout his career, including Hollywood icons Tom and Nicole, Pele, and Sylvester Stallone, and in the book he offers an honest description of what it's like to work in a position where lives are actually at danger. He was a member of Mohamed Al-protection Fayed's squad at the time of Diana's death, the owner of the Hô tel Ritz Paris and formerly Harrods department store and Fulham FC, according to Daily Mail.

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