World

Jury will hear Diana inquest, U.K. High Court rules

Mohamed Al Fayed won a court battle Friday to have a jury preside over the inquest into the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales, and his son Dodi Fayed.

Mohamed Al Fayed won a court battle Friday to have a jury preside over the inquest into the deaths of Diana, Princess of Wales,and his son Dodi Fayed.

In an unusual ruling, three senior judges at London's High Court overturned a decision by the deputy royal coroner Dame Elizabeth Butler-Sloss that she would sit alone without a jury. The judges decided that the coroner would hear the inquest and "shall do so sitting with a jury."

Earlier this week, lawyers had challengedthe Butler-Sloss ruling, arguing her decision to act alone gave the appearance of impropriety. The legal appeal was launched by Al Fayed along with the family of the couple's chauffeur and lawyers for the Al Fayed-owned Ritz hotel in Paris.

Al Fayed, the millionaire owner of the Harrods department store, was dissatisfied with Butler-Sloss's decision that she alonewould hear evidence and determine what caused the deaths of Diana and his son Dodi.

The lawyer for the Ritz, Michael Beloff, argued that because Butler-Sloss had been the deputy coroner of the Queen's Household, there would bea perception she "lacked independence," to assess the allegation that Diana and Fayed had been murdered.

Inquest to begin in May

Butler-Sloss, Britain's former top female judge and a member of the House of Lords, had made the decision last month to sit alone during the inquest, which is expected to begin in May.

Butler-Sloss said in her January decision that a jury could find it difficult to cope with the volume and detail of the evidence.

The inquest could only begin after the investigations into the August 1997 deaths of Diana and Fayed were complete. A two-year French investigation, a three-year Metropolitan Police inquiry and repeated legal action by Al Fayed have delayed the inquest by nearly 10 years.

Diana, 36, and Fayed, 42, were killed along with chauffeur Henri Paul when their Mercedes crashed in Paris's Pont d'Alma tunnel. The only survivor, bodyguard Trevor Rees — formerly known as Rees-Jones — was badly hurt.

Al Fayed's legal team had pressed the judge to call a jury, saying it was the only way the public would be satisfied that proper care was taken over the issues surrounding the crash.