Probably the result of another drink and drug fuelled night...
I wonder what QE2 has to hide??
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/eur...ey/5280732.stm
A 51-year-old man from Jersey is trying to prove he is the illegitimate son of Princess Margaret, making him 12th in line to the throne.
Robert Brown is asking the High Court in London for access to the wills of the Queen Mother and Princess Margaret.
In a summons, he cites the Queen, the Attorney General and the executors of the wills of the Queen Mother and Princess Margaret as defendants.
The Queen and her representatives have declined to comment about the case.
Succession rights
Mr Brown has also tried, unsuccessfully, to get information from the Department for Constitutional Affairs as well as the Prime Minister's and Cabinet Office.
He claims the case raises the major constitutional issue of the rights of illegitimate children in the line of succession.
If Mr Brown was the son of the late Princess Margaret, he could become 12th in line to the throne - between Zara Phillips and Princess Margaret's only son Viscount Linley.
Mr Brown insists there is a public interest issue on the grounds of openness and consistency and says he would not object to the wills being made public, if they had once been made private to protect an illegitimate child.
It is not known when it will go before the High Court's Probate Division.
I wonder what QE2 has to hide??
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/eur...ey/5280732.stm
A 51-year-old man from Jersey is trying to prove he is the illegitimate son of Princess Margaret, making him 12th in line to the throne.
Robert Brown is asking the High Court in London for access to the wills of the Queen Mother and Princess Margaret.
In a summons, he cites the Queen, the Attorney General and the executors of the wills of the Queen Mother and Princess Margaret as defendants.
The Queen and her representatives have declined to comment about the case.
Succession rights
Mr Brown has also tried, unsuccessfully, to get information from the Department for Constitutional Affairs as well as the Prime Minister's and Cabinet Office.
He claims the case raises the major constitutional issue of the rights of illegitimate children in the line of succession.
If Mr Brown was the son of the late Princess Margaret, he could become 12th in line to the throne - between Zara Phillips and Princess Margaret's only son Viscount Linley.
Mr Brown insists there is a public interest issue on the grounds of openness and consistency and says he would not object to the wills being made public, if they had once been made private to protect an illegitimate child.
It is not known when it will go before the High Court's Probate Division.
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