The Silent Witness: Princess Diana’s Bodyguard Breaks Decades of Silence

For nearly thirty years, the tragic night of August 31, 1997, has been shrouded in conspiracy theories, intense media scrutiny, and unanswered questions. The fateful car crash in Paris’s Pont de l’Alma tunnel claimed the lives of Princess Diana, Dodi Fayed, and their driver, Henri Paul. The sole survivor of that horrific event was Trevor Rees-Jones (now Trevor Rees), Diana’s bodyguard. For years, it was widely reported that profound amnesia, caused by severe facial trauma and brain injuries, had completely erased his memory of the impact.
Now, breaking decades of structured silence, the man who was paid to protect the “People’s Princess” has spoken out, offering a raw, grounded perspective on the nightmare that changed the British monarchy forever.
Reclaiming the Narrative from Conspiracy
In a series of candid reflections, Rees has addressed the persistent rumors that his memory loss was a convenient cover-up. For a long time, conspiracy theorists claimed he knew exactly what happened but was pressured into silence by the establishment or intelligence agencies. Rees has firmly dismantled these ideas.
While he admits that his memory of the literal seconds before and after the crash remains fractured—a clinical reality of severe traumatic brain injury—he has recovered crucial context about the hours leading up to the disaster.
“I am not hiding anything,” Rees has emphasized. “My silence wasn’t a conspiracy; it was a consequence of trauma and a desire to piece my own life back together away from the relentless media circus.”
The Chaos of Paris
According to Rees, the atmosphere in Paris that weekend was electric but increasingly claustrophobic. The paparazzi presence around the Ritz Hotel was unprecedented, creating an environment of high anxiety. He recalls the last-minute decision to switch cars and strategies to evade the photographers—a move that ultimately put Henri Paul behind the wheel of the ill-fated Mercedes-Benz.
Rees clarifies that his primary focus was the safety of Diana and Dodi. He disputes the narrative that the couple was reckless, describing them instead as individuals desperately trying to find a moment of peace away from the flashing cameras. He also addressed the controversial issue of seatbelts; it remains a haunting regret that while he was buckled in—which ultimately saved his life—Diana was not.
Moving Beyond the Ghost of the Past
Today, Trevor Rees lives a remarkably quiet life, working as a global security director and focusing on his family. His decision to speak out now is less about revealing explosive new secrets and more about reclaiming his own agency.
For years, he was viewed merely as a tragic footnote or a suspicious variable in Diana’s story. By sharing his reality, Rees hopes to humanize the tragedy, reminding the world that behind the grand conspiracies lies a very real human catastrophe that cost three lives and left him with physical and emotional scars that will never fully heal. His testimony serves as a sobering reminder of the toxic media culture of the late ’90s and provides a semblance of closure to a story that has gripped the world for decades.