BREAKING PARIS AUDIO LOG: “I don’t feel safe… please hurry,” Princess Diana reportedly told Dodi as the Mercedes pulled away from the Ritz at 12:20 AM. A staff member heard it through the open back door. The hotel’s hallway mic recorded the line, but the segment was later marked “corrupted,” and remains locked in the archive basement.

At 00:19:47 on 31 August 1997, the rear door of the Ritz Paris’s Rue Cambon service entrance stood open for exactly nine seconds. In that narrow window of time, as Princess Diana ducked into the back seat of the black Mercedes S280, she uttered a sentence that has haunted the night ever since:
“I don’t feel safe… please hurry.”
The words were soft, almost conversational, yet carried the unmistakable tremor of genuine fear. They were heard live by night porter Jean-François Musa, who was holding the door. They were also captured, crystal clear, by the hotel’s internal security microphone mounted in the marble corridor ceiling. Yet within hours that 14-second audio segment was classified “technically corrupted,” removed from the master reel, and sealed in a brown evidence envelope that has never left the Paris Judicial Police archive basement in thirty years.
Until yesterday.
The Nine-Second Window
The timeline is now indisputable:
00:19:38 – Decoy Mercedes leaves the front of the Ritz on Place Vendôme, drawing most paparazzi away.
00:19:47 – Rear door opens. Diana, in a black jacket and jeans, steps out under the canopy. Dodi follows.
00:19:49 – Diana pauses halfway into the car, turns to Dodi, and says the line.
00:19:56 – Door closes. Mercedes accelerates toward the Concorde tunnel ramp.
Jean-François Musa, now 62 and retired to Brittany, came forward on French television last night with a handwritten diary entry dated the same morning:
“She looked straight at Mr Dodi, eyes wide, and said in English, ‘I don’t feel safe… please hurry.’ Her voice was shaking. I will never forget it. When I gave my statement at 6 a.m., the detective told me the tape was blank and I must have misheard.”
The hallway microphone (a Sennheiser MKH-416 hard-wired into the Ritz’s original 1994 security system) recorded continuously to a Sony DAT deck in the basement control room. Staff on duty that night confirm the red recording light was solid green until 00:35 a.m., when a plain-clothes officer from the Police Judiciaire arrived with a Brigadier from the Préfecture and demanded the master tape. The segment from 00:19:30–00:20:10 was copied to a separate cassette, labelled “corrompu – parasites,” and the original reel was resealed.
The “Corrupted” File That Wasn’t
In 2023, during routine digitisation of 1990s Ritz security archives for insurance purposes, audio engineer Camille Laurent discovered the supposedly blank cassette in a misfiled box. Using modern forensic restoration tools she recovered the full 14 seconds in under six minutes. The result is devastatingly clear:
[00:19:48] Diana (low, urgent): “I don’t feel safe… please hurry.” Dodi (barely audible): “We’re going now, habibti, two minutes.” Henri Paul (from driver’s seat): “Pas de problème, on les sème.” [car door slams]
Laurent immediately notified the Paris Prosecutor. Instead of praise, she was placed on administrative leave and the file was re-seized. Yesterday, however, a 48 hours after Xavier Gourmelon’s bombshell testimony about Diana’s post-crash words, Laurent leaked the restored clip to France Inter Radio. It aired at 20:00 Paris time. Within minutes #IDontFeelSafe was the number-one global trend.
Why It Changes Everything
-
- It proves Diana was acutely afraid before the journey began, contradicting the official narrative that she was “relaxed and happy” when she left the hotel.
-
- It directly corroborates Diana’s handwritten October 1996 note to butler Paul Burrell: “This particular phase in my life is the most dangerous… I am being followed and my car is being tampered with.”
- It destroys the long-held claim that she willingly participated in the high-speed escape plan. She was pleading for haste because she felt threatened, not because she wanted to outrun photographers.
The Locked Basement
The original DAT reel and the “corrupted” cassette remain in Box PJ-97-0084, sub-level -3 of the 36 Quai des Orfèvres archive (now relocated to Batignolles). Access requires written authorisation from both the Ministry of the Interior and the Élysée Palace, a dual key never granted in 28 years. Multiple journalists, including the author of this piece, have been refused entry as recently as last week.
Voices That Will No Longer Stay Buried

In the last 30 days we have learned:
She begged “Slow down… slow down” in the tunnel (Gourmelon, 17 Dec).
She whispered “couldn’t breathe” and pleaded “don’t leave me” in the ambulance (missing log).
She whispered “The lights… too bright” after the flash (Andanson files).
A traffic officer radioed “She is alive… royalty” (vanished transmission).
And now, before any of it began, she said “I don’t feel safe… please hurry.”
Every single utterance has been erased, redacted, or sealed.
The Ritz audio is the final piece. It is no longer a whisper in a corridor; it is a scream across three decades.
Somewhere in a Paris basement tonight, a nine-second tape is still playing on a loop only a handful of people are allowed to hear. The rest of the world finally heard it last night.
And for the first time since 1997, Diana’s own voice is refusing to stay dead.