Spy papers reveal 1981 bid to kill Queen in NZ
A MENTALLY disturbed teenager tried to assassinate Queen Elizabeth II during her 1981 visit to New Zealand and police covered up the botched attempt, according to official documents released yesterday.
Christopher Lewis fired a single shot toward the Queen’s car as she toured the South Island city of Dunedin, the documents from New Zealand’s Security Intelligence Service spy agency revealed.
No one was hurt and police reportedly assured members of the royal party who asked about a gunshot that they had simply heard a firework exploding.
Lewis, 17 at the time, was picked up soon after on an unrelated armed robbery charge and made a rambling confession about his attempt on the monarch’s life.
While police said he was delusional and “lives in a dream world” they found a .22 rifle and spent cartridge in the building where he said the attempt took place. He claimed to be a member of a right-wing organization called the National Imperial Guerilla Army, which police concluded had only three members.
Officers at the time decided against charging him with treason over the October 1981 assassination attempt but pursued firearms and robbery charges.
The SIS documents, released publicly in response to a media request, show police were concerned the incident would become public and conspired to keep it secret.
The New Zealand Herald said authorities were worried it might jeopardise future royal visits to the former British colony.
“Lewis did indeed originally intend to assassinate the Queen,” the documents say. “However (he) did not have a suitable vantage point from which to fire, nor a sufficiently high-powered rifle for the range from the target.”
Lewis had a string of serious criminal convictions and was in jail for murder when he killed himself in 1997.
In 1982, unemployed decorator Michael Fagan had a few drinks and scaled the walls of Buckingham Palace, climbing up a drainpipe to enter the Queen’s London residence.
He wandered into her bedroom and reportedly sat on the end of the bed for a chat with the perturbed monarch before a palace staffer lured him away with the promise of a shot of whiskey.