Ken Wharfe’s account lands with the quiet weight of someone who has replayed the same night for years, searching for the moment it all could have changed. To him, Diana’s final journey was not a random collision of bad luck, but a sequence of human choices that stripped away every layer of protection she once had. A drunk, unqualified driver. A reckless decoy plan that turned photographers into pursuers. And, beneath it all, a princess who had walked away from the only security machine powerful enough to say “no” on her behalf.
What lingers is not conspiracy, but regret: a sense that duty, discipline, and institutional courage failed her at the precise moment she needed them most. In Wharfe’s telling, the tragedy of Paris is not just that the world lost Diana, but that her sons lost a mother who, by every professional measure he knows, should still be alive.