Kathy E <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed will get a chance to discuss his
conspiracy theory Thursday when he goes before a Paris magistrate to
testify in the inquiry into the death of his son, Dodi, and Princess
Diana. 

French officials insist they have no evidence of a conspiracy. They
blame the August 31 car crash on excessive speed and the use of alcohol
by the driver, Henri Paul, who also died. 

But last month, Al Fayed, who is conducting his own investigation, told
a British tabloid he thinks the crash was not an accident. 

"I believe in my heart, 99.9 percent, that it was not an accident. There
was a conspiracy, and I will not rest until I have established exactly 
what happened," he told The Mirror. 

"I will find the person who caused this accident. I believe there were 
people who did not want Dodi and Diana to be together," he told the   
newspaper. 

Investigating magistrate Herve Stephan, whom Al Fayed is to see for    
a closed-door meeting scheduled for 3 p.m. (1400 GMT), is said to be   
unhappy with Al Fayed's public statements. 

Stephen reportedly intends to confront Al Fayed with questions raised in
Al Fayed's own investigation -- which included interviews with more than
90 employees of the Hotel Ritz. 

The Hotel Ritz, owned by Al Fayed, is where Diana and Dodi had dinner
the night of the crash. It is also the hotel that employed Paul. 

French officials say their evidence indicates Paul's blood alcohol level
was well over the legal limit and that he had taken prescription drugs
the night of the crash. 

There also has been the suggestion that hotel officials may have tried
to cover up the extent to which hotel staff knew of Paul's possible
drinking problem. 

Al Fayed is expected to tell Stephan that he has confidence in the    
French inquiry into the crash, which occurred in the tunnel under the  
Place de l'Alma in central Paris. The only survivor was bodyguard     
Trevor Rees-Jones. 

Al Fayed's appearance before Stephan is routine, because he is       
considered a civil plaintiff in the criminal inquiry. Civil plaintiffs
are eligible to share damages awarded by Paris courts, and magistrates
normally interview them. 
--
Kathy E
"I can only please one person a day, today is NOT your day, and tomorrow
isn't looking too good for you either"
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