Having read John Morgan's epic from 2014 'How They Murdered Princess Diana', this is my second foray into the investigation. Noel Botham's 'The Murder of Princess Diana', first published in 2007, is much shorter with just 244 pages, far less detail and information than is found in Morgan's book. Botham splits his work in half with the first 120 pages covering Diana's troubled time in the Royal family and the second half covering the events in Paris.
It has to be said that both books come to very similar conclusions and point the finger of responsibility chiefly to British Intelligence and also uncover many of the same examples of cover-up, involving both French and British authorities. Botham concentrates on the French, so called, investigation, whereas Morgan features the British Inquest evidence. Also at variance is Morgan's more detailed probe into Diana's condition post crash, her medical maltreatment in the car and in the SAMU ambulance, which Botham does not look into in such detail. Morgan identifies a certain Sherard Cowper Coles, MI6 agent, who replaced Eugene Curley, MI6 France, shortly before these events. Botham does not mention these men in this book, but relates statements from MI6 whistle-blowers Richard Tomlinson and David Shayler to reach the same verdict. Morgan also provides more unknown motorcyclists harassing the vehicle, where Botham just features a single bike with the white Fiat Uno involved in causing the crash.
Both authors identify the Fiat driver as James Andanson, a man with paparazzi and intelligence links who was found years later in his burned out car with a bullet hole in his head. Both authors demolish the so called evidence that Henry Paul was drunk and expose the fraud of his autopsy blood sample showing excess alcohol and a large reading of carbon monoxide. Amounts that would stagger a medium sized elephant, although Paul shows no signs of inebriation on the CCTV at the Ritz Hotel. Morgan states that there were two bodies on the slab at Paul's autopsy and both point to there being a suicide in Paris that day of a depressed man who drunk alcohol before fixing a hose from his car exhaust. Both authors expose Rosa Monckton, Diana's close friend and trusted confidant who latched onto the Princess as problems with her marriage to Charles began. Both Mr & Mrs Monckton worked for MI6. Both authors also cover the illegal embalming performed on Diana at the Pitie Salpetriere Hospital, allegedly performed to remove evidence of her pregnancy.
In summation 'The Murder of Princess Diana' dishes the dirt and does reveal enough of the truth behind this high establishment sanctioned assassination and cover-up. I personally prefer the much larger and detailed book from John Morgan.
She may have been termed the 'people's princess', but the people must not learn of who caused this fake accident, or who gave the green light.
What is not given a mention in both books concerns Mohammed Al Fayed. By the 1960's Al Fayed had become a senior Egyptian intelligence officer, working under cover with a company Al-Nasir, which was owned by Adnan Khashoggi the arms dealer involved years later in Iran-Contra. In the late 1960's Al Fayed turned up in Papa Doc Duvalier's Haiti and established links with a certain supposed oil geologist named George DeMohrenschildt, the CIA asset and babysitter of Lee Harvey Oswald in Dallas in 1963. Small world!