Michael Fawcett

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Michael Fawcett is the former senior valet and a "close personal friend" of Charles, Prince of Wales. Fawcett resigned from his position in Prince Charles' inner circle in March 2003, after the report by Sir Michael Peat

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[edit] Career

Like many Royal servants, Fawcett started his career as a footman. During this period, he was poorly paid, and took other work to supplement his income - including waiter duties at Claridge's. It was here one night when NCP carparks owner Sir Donald Gosling entered Claridges restaurant without a neck tie. Fawcett provided a highly suitable tie choice, and the two became friends.[1]

Fawcett rose to become Prince Charles's personal valet. Fawcett is widely described by his employees as strict, and often bullying, but was protected by the Prince, such as in an episode in 1998 in which various staff complained about Fawcett's bullying attitude. Former royal press officer Dickie Arbiter remarked of Fawcett, "Fawcett has been there for so many years, so close in times of stress, that he knows all the ins and outs and all the warts."[2]

[edit] Gift selling

In March 2003, after the report by Sir Michael Peat accusing him of selling gifts during his time working for the royal household, including a Rolex Daytona watch valued at £3500.[3] Despite his official resignation, he returned to work for the Prince as a freelance organiser and in other roles, while those employees who had complained were "no longer with the Prince's staff".

In 2005, the former royal nanny Tiggy Legge-Bourke said to the Mail on Sunday that in 2003 many people had been afraid to help with the Peat inquiry: "None came forward because no one could guarantee Michael would go. He resigned, then four days later he was back. Everybody was concerned that if you spoke out against him, he could get rid of you."[3]

[edit] Rape accusation

He was thrust into the public eye again in November 2003 when George Smith, a valet working on Charles' staff, alleged that Fawcett had raped him some years earlier, and also that he had once happened upon Fawcett and the Prince sharing a bed one morning when delivering the Prince's breakfast.[4] Fawcett's innocence was widely protested by the whole of the British establishment, including most newspapers and royal commentators. However, Fawcett's unsuccessful libel action against The Guardian and The Mail on Sunday, and the speed and extent with which total censorship was placed upon any further coverage of the affair, has given rise to conspiracy theories regarding the veracity of Smith's allegations. Furthermore, Smith died on August 24, 2005, to extreme lack of reaction from the British press, considering his possible significance.

[edit] After resignation

Although forced to resign from the official staff in light of the accusations in Sir Michael Peat's report, Fawcett returned to the Prince's staff in a freelance capacity. Forming his own valet services and entertainment company, Fawcett's wife Debbie (a former Buckingham Palace housemaid), became the official custodian of the Prince's watercolour paintings, arranging for them to be sold off to private buyers or sent to auction - the proceeds contributing to the £4million raised by the Prince for worthy causes. She also took over from her husband the important task of buying the Christmas and birthday gifts the Prince gives to family and friends, as well as presents for his godchildren.[1]

In January 2008, Fawcett "tested" his friend Sir Donald Gosling's yacht M.Y. Leander on behalf of the Prince, before Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall chartered Leander for their royal tour of islands in the Caribbean, on the grounds of reduced carbon emissions over the use of an aeroplane. This was the first official royal cruise since the decommissioning of the Royal Yacht Britannia.[1]

[edit] Personal life

Fawcett married former royal housemaid, Debbie, in the early 1990's. The couple have a son and a daughter.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c The truth about Prince Charles's Caribbean carbon footprint. Daily Mail (23 February, 2008). Retrieved on 2008-04-08.
  2. ^ BBC NEWS | UK | Michael Fawcett: Trusted aide
  3. ^ a b Tiggy attacks Fawcett, the £250,000 fixer for Charles by Susan Clarke in the Mail on Sunday dated 4 September 2005, online at newsbackup.com (accessed 2 February 2008)
  4. ^ News - Telegraph