After 30 Years on the Run, Trevor Rees-Jones Breaks His Silence — The Sole Survivor of Diana’s Crash Confesses: “They Used Money and Power to Silence Me…” 😱👇👇👇
In a stunning and long-awaited confession that has electrified global headlines, Trevor Rees-Jones, the former bodyguard and only survivor of the 1997 Paris car crash that killed Princess Diana and Dodi Fayed, has broken a decades-long silence — and what he revealed has sent shockwaves through the world.
After nearly 30 years of staying hidden from the spotlight, Rees-Jones, now in his 50s, gave an exclusive interview from a private location, where he finally shared chilling details of the night that changed history. With his voice shaking and emotion raw in his eyes, he said:
“It wasn’t just a crash. And it wasn’t just an accident. I was told to forget — or they’d make me disappear too.”
Rees-Jones suffered severe injuries in the crash and spent weeks in a medically induced coma. For years, officials claimed he had no memory of the accident. But now, he says that was never true.
“I remembered more than they wanted me to,” he revealed. “There were conversations before the crash. Warnings. Strange people watching us. That tunnel wasn’t just coincidence. Someone made sure we never got out alive.”
According to him, powerful forces — both inside and outside royal circles — moved quickly after the crash to suppress key details, offering him money, legal threats, and ultimately, silence in exchange for his cooperation.
“They came to my hospital bed. They told me what I’d say to the press. They drafted my statement. I was young, broken, and scared. I stayed quiet… until now.”
The most haunting part of his confession? Trevor claims Diana was alive after the crash and trying to speak, but the scene was “deliberately mishandled”.
This explosive testimony has reignited demands for a full independent investigation into Diana’s death. Social media is ablaze with tags like #DianaTruthUncovered, #ReesJonesSpeaks, and #JusticeForDiana.
Royal watchers and truth-seekers are calling Rees-Jones’s account the “missing puzzle piece” in a decades-old mystery. Supporters of Princess Diana — still known around the world as the People’s Princess — are urging Parliament and international courts to reopen the case.
So far, Buckingham Palace has made no comment, and neither have French authorities. But one thing is certain:
The truth that has been buried for nearly 30 years is beginning to rise — and Trevor Rees-Jones’s voice may be the one that finally sets it free.