The Scottish Mail on Sunday

The night Lady Lucan begged: Please don’t kill me, John

- By Chris Hastings ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

THE wife of Lord Lucan pleaded with him to spare her life moments after the murder of their nanny on the night he disappeare­d.

The revelation comes in the first ever television interview to be given by Lady Lucan, in which she recalls how she confronted her husband after their nanny Sandra Rivett had been killed in the basement of their Belgravia home.

She said: ‘I said to him, “Please don’t kill me John.” And then I asked, “Where’s Sandra?” And he said, “She’s dead. Don’t look.”’

Lucan is believed to have mistaken Miss Rivett, 29, for his wife, whom he had intended to kill on the night of November 7, 1974.

Instead, the peer bludgeoned Miss Rivett to death with a piece of lead piping and vanished within hours of the murder. He has not been seen since. Over the years, there have been unconfirme­d sightings of him from South America to Africa but his whereabout­s and his fate remain a mystery.

Lady Lucan has been interviewe­d for the ITV documentar­y: My Husband, The Truth, which includes unseen family footage of the Lucan family. She reveals that relations between her and her husband became strained almost as soon as they settled down to married life.

She said: ‘He talked to me more before our marriage than ever he did afterwards. He said, “That’s the point of being married, you don’t have to talk to the person.”’

In the interview, Lady Lucan talks about her husband’s reckless lifestyle, his heavy debts and the bitter custody battle over their three children, which the Earl lost just days before Miss Rivett’s murder.

She will also offer up her own theory of what happened to her husband. In 2013 speaking to The Mail on Sunday she said: ‘I believe my late husband committed suicide shortly after the murder of Sandra, most probably by bravely throwing himself on to the propellers of a ship in mid-Channel, hoping that his remains would be irrecovera­ble so that death duties would not be immediatel­y payable as the children’s education had not been secured.

‘My husband committed suicide because he was an honourable man.’ She added: ‘Of course, I have learned to forgive him.’ At the time, she was commenting on the events of 1974 being made into a drama which starred Rory Kinnear as her husband.

She said: ‘I don’t think it is right that a criminal matter should be used for entertainm­ent. The film is based on the most absurd book I have read on the Lucan affair so I didn’t think it was sensible to have anything to do with it.’

According to reports, she has been paid £65,000 to take part in the new documentar­y. She is believed to have a strained relationsh­ip with her three children. In 1999, Lord Lucan was pronounced dead and last year a High Court judge issued a death certificat­e meaning his only son George was free to inherit the earldom.

Even more than 40 years on, the mystery of Lucan’s disappeara­nce is a subject of abiding fascinatio­n for the public.

Among the numerous theories put forward are that he was kidnapped by the IRA, or that he shot himself dead and was then fed to tigers in a zoo in Kent owned by his friend, the late John Aspinall. There have been claimed sightings of Lucan across the world, including France, Australia and Cape Town, where police examined a beer glass for his fingerprin­ts.

Ten years ago, he was said to have been living in a car in New Zealand. In another version of events, he had renamed himself ‘Jungly Barry’ for a new life as a hippy in India.

Lady Lucan’s daughter, Camilla Bingham, who is a QC, declined to comment on the documentar­y last night. The programme will be shown on Monday, June 5.

‘He told me, “She’s dead... don’t look” ’

 ??  ?? MERCY PLEA: Lady Lucan in the new documentar­y. Inset right: With Lucan in 1963
MERCY PLEA: Lady Lucan in the new documentar­y. Inset right: With Lucan in 1963

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