The smoking gun?
I don't recall an exchange of gunfire.
Lord Stevens' report about the death of the Princess of Wales is out and puts to bed a bunch of nonsense about pregnancies, engagements, and conspiracy plots hatched by Phil the Greek. But what's this verb (in bold) doing in the article in The Guardian?
As far as I recall, Princess Diana wasn't in a gunfight. She was injured in a car crash. So why has some dim hack used "wounded", which you'd use of someone who'd been shot, and why has some dozy sub-editor let this pass? Who were the men known only as "the Greek" and "the Egyptian", and what of the old lady mysteriously referred to as "HM the Q", said to be the boss of The Firm?
Lord Stevens' report about the death of the Princess of Wales is out and puts to bed a bunch of nonsense about pregnancies, engagements, and conspiracy plots hatched by Phil the Greek. But what's this verb (in bold) doing in the article in The Guardian?
Pictures were taken of the princess as she lay fatally wounded while emergency workers worked to save her.
As far as I recall, Princess Diana wasn't in a gunfight. She was injured in a car crash. So why has some dim hack used "wounded", which you'd use of someone who'd been shot, and why has some dozy sub-editor let this pass? Who were the men known only as "the Greek" and "the Egyptian", and what of the old lady mysteriously referred to as "HM the Q", said to be the boss of The Firm?
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