Lord Lucan's wife found dead

The mystery of what happened to Richard Lucan has fascinated the public for decades and speculation about his whereabouts has long been a staple of the British press.

The mystery of what happened to Richard Lucan has fascinated the public for decades and speculation about his whereabouts has long been a staple of the British press.

Published Sep 27, 2017

Share

London -  The wife of British aristocrat

Lord Lucan, who vanished without trace 43 years ago after the

murder of his children’s nanny, has been found dead, London

police said on Wednesday.

The mystery of what happened to Richard Lucan, a dapper,

moustachioed lord known as "Lucky", has fascinated the public

for decades and speculation about his whereabouts has long been

a staple of the British press.

Lord Lucan disappeared hours after nanny Sandra Rivett was

found bludgeoned to death in his house in central London in

1974. A car he was using was later found on the south English

coast with a length of lead piping.

It was alleged the peer had mistaken the nanny for his

estranged wife Veronica, who was also attacked and fled to a

nearby pub covered in blood to raise the alarm. She later

identified her husband as the assailant.

Police said on Wednesday they had found the body of

80-year-old Lady Lucan after forcing entry to a house in the

upmarket Belgravia area of London.

"The death is being treated as unexplained but is not

believed to be suspicious," police said.

Over the years, the British press have reported supposed

sightings of Lord Lucan across the world, including in

Australia, India, the Netherlands and South Africa -- but his

relatives believe him to be dead.

The London High Court declared him dead in 1999 and last

year a judge issued a death certificate allowing his son George

Bingham to inherit his title.

"My own personal view, and it was one I took I think as an

eight-year-old boy, is he’s unfortunately been dead since that

time (of his disappearance)," Bingham said last year.

One of numerous theories about what became of Lucan, who

would now be 82, was that he shot himself and was then fed to

tigers at the zoo of his friend John Aspinall. Aspinall himself

said in 2000 that Lucan had weighted himself down with a stone

and drowned himself in the English Channel. 

Reuters

Related Topics: