Jump directly to the content
DRIVER'S DEAL

Princess Diana’s chauffeur settles slander case with BBC after claim he leaked info about Panorama interview

The slander case related to the late Princess of Wales' famous and controversial Panorama interview

PRINCESS Diana’s former chauffeur has settled a High Court slander case against the BBC.

The Corporation has agreed to pay an unspecified sum to Stephen Davies after claiming he leaked information about her before her famous Panorama interview.

Princess Diana (return from New York) at Heathrow Airport, London with chaffeur Steve Davies. 31.01.1995.
2
Princess Diana's former chauffeur Stephen Davies, left, has settled a High Court slander case against the BBCCredit: Alpha Photo Press Agency
File photo dated 20/11/1995 of Diana, Princess of Wales during her Panorama interview with Martin Bashir for the BBC. Twenty four years have passed since Diana, Princess of Wales died in a Paris car crash. The princess - the Duke of Cambridge and the Duke of Sussex's late mother - was just 36 was she was killed on August 31 1997. Issue date: Tuesday August 31, 2021. PA Photo. See PA story ROYAL Diana. Photo credit should read: BBC/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
2
The Corporation claimed Mr Davies leaked information about the late Princess of Wales before her 1995 Panorama interviewCredit: PA

He was the Princess of Wales’ chauffeur at the time she spoke to Martin Bashir in November 1995.

Mr Davies was sacked without explanation four months later.

He sued the BBC after a probe revealed a document from a meeting in September 1995 which stated that Diana and her brother Earl Spencer were told by Mr Bashir that the driver “feeds Today newspaper . . . change your chauffeur”.

A spokesman for the BBC said it accepted that the claim in the document “was and is wholly false”.

READ MORE ROYAL NEWS

The BBC managed to pull off a royal coup at the time when veteran Panorama journalist Martin Bashir spoke to Princess Diana in her first solo interview since her marriage to Prince Charles.

Diana was still part of the royal family - but only just, after she and Charles legally separated three years before.

Her scandalous interview was kept a total secret from Buckingham Palace - and within a month of it being broadcast, the Queen wrote to both Diana and Charles personally advising them to divorce.

Dressed in a powerful black suit and white blouse, Diana sat down with Bashir for an hour in what would become one of the most explosive interviews ever conducted.

She dropped a number of bombshells as she opened up about her life as a member of the Royal Family.

A staggering 22.8 million watched it, and it remains one of the highest-rated BBC programmes of all time.

Awkward Royal Family moments you might have missed
Topics