Declassified documents confirm a botched assassination attempt on the British monarch in October 1981. The documents also show that police suppressed any information about the incident from going public.
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New Zealand police covered up an assassination attempt on Queen Elizabeth II during the monarch's 1981 visit to the city of Dunedin, according to recently declassified documents seen on Thursday.
The New Zealand news website Stuff.co.nz and the AFP news agency reported that documents from the country's Security Intelligence Service (SIS) detail how local police worried about the incident becoming public.
The SIS documents also confirm the testimony of a local detective who first spoke about the botched attempt and the subsequent cover-up in 1997.
Christopher John Lewis, a local 17-year-old, took up a position with a .22 rifle in the fifth story of a building near to the Otago Museum on October 14, 1981. The Queen, who is New Zealand's head of state, was on her way to the museum as part of her visit.
As the Queen exited her motorcade to enter the building, Lewis fired a single shot, narrowly missing the monarch's head. Police told reporters who had heard the gunfire that the sound was the noise of a council sign falling over. Officers told the royal party they had heard a firework exploding.
Lewis was arrested shortly thereafter for an unrelated crime, but confessed to police he had intended to kill the Queen. Police then found the .22 rifle and a spent cartridge at the location which Lewis claimed to have shot from.
In police interviews, Lewis said he was a member of the National Imperial Guerilla Army along with two other people known as the Polar Bear and the Snowman. He later said the organization and the two accomplices were "a figment of my imagination."
The SIS later said: "Lewis did indeed originally intend to assassinate the Queen, however did not have a suitable vantage point from which to fire, nor a sufficiently high-powered rifle for the range from the target."
Despite the evidence, police decided against charging Lewis with treason and only pursued burglary and firearms charges. Lewis committed further crimes after his release before committing suicide in 1997.
The House of Windsor began in 1917 in the midst of war when the English royal family disavowed its German lineage. From the House of Saxony-Coburg-Gotha, the House of Windsor was born a century ago.
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A terribly nice family
The concept of the "royal family" originated in the middle of the 19th century with Prince Albert, Queen Victoria and their nine children. Since then, not only is a queen or a king responsible for the British Empire, but a whole extended family. The Windsors have modernized and perfected this concept. Today, the Queen even accepts Camilla, the second wife of son Charles, into the family circle.
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Monarchy in danger
George V (1865-1936, right) looked like his cousin Czar Nicholas II of Russia. But when the latter needed to abdicate after the 1917 Revolution, George V distanced himself and quickly withdrew the offer for political asylum for fear of unrest in his own kingdom. Nicholas II was assassinated shortly thereafter.
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Stability in the face of war
As World War I continued, the reign of George V stabilized after the change of name to Windsor. While elsewhere monarchies crumbled, George V led his kingdom through an economic crisis, and granted numerous colonies independence within the Commonwealth.
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The abdication
After George V's death in 1936, his son Edward VIII succeeded him on the throne. His reign lasted only 326 days - the shortest in British history. Edward's impending marriage to American Wallis Simpson caused both a scandal and a constitutional crisis. The conservative government eventually forced him to abdicate.
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The crisis continues
Edward's younger brother Albert stepped into the breach, and in 1937 was crowned King George VI. With his wife Elizabeth and his two daughters Elizabeth and Margaret Rose, George VI had a strong family behind him. He led the country through World War II, but was burdened with poor health. In 1952, the king died of arterial thrombosis.
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Retreating at Windsor Castle
During World War II, the royal family stayed in solidarity with the deprived general populace by living only on food rations, for example. George stayed in London despite the bomb attacks and the damage to Buckingham Palace. He spent the weekends with the family in Windsor.
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'We want the king!'
With their commitment to the war effort, the royal family became a symbol of British resistance to fascism. After Germany's capitulation on May 8, 1945, a jubilant crowd gathered before Buckingham Palace and screamed "We want the King!" The royals were at the height of their popularity.
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Royal wedding draws the masses
In 1947, people flocked to the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten. The king's daughter proved to be a godsend for the British crown. Since her coronation in 1952, she has stood for continuity. A largely scandal-free marriage and four children have ensured the continuation of the Windsors at a time when many other monarchies have dissolved.
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The unhappy heir to the throne
The somewhat doomed marriage between Prince William and Lady Diana ended in 1992 amid an unsightly media spectacle that harmed the prestige of the royal family. Their two sons had to cope not only with the divorce in 1996, but also the sudden death of their mother in 1997. It would be a long time before Prince Charles was again a respected royal family member.
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Queen Elizabeth celebrates
In 2016, Queen Elizabeth celebrated her 90th birthday (pictured), and in 2012, her diamond jubilee was celebrated. She has held the throne longer than any British monarch before her. Currently, she is the longest serving head of state in the world. Despite increasing criticism of the royal family from the media, the support of the monarchy under Queen Elizabeth II seems unbroken.
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The dream royal couple
After his father's inglorious divorce and the tragic death of his mother, the private life of the queen's grandson William has drawn high media scrutiny. In Kate Middleton he has chosen a partner who can and wants to fulfill her role in the royal family - two young heirs included.
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Charlotte and George: the next generation
The latest Windsor offspring have become media phenomena at a very young age. The "Prince George effect" describes Prince George's influence on business and pop culture - meaning whatever George wears sells. At the tender age of two, the prince has made GQ Magazine's list of the 50 Best Dressed Men in Britain.
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Internal investigation opened
After the New Zealand website approached the police with information about the cover-up, a spokesman confirmed that a probe had been launched.
"Given the interest in this historic matter, the Police Commissioner Mike Bush has asked the Deputy Commissioner National Operations, Mike Clement, to oversee an examination by current investigation staff of the relevant case file."
Tom Lewis, who headed the initial police investigation and is not related to Christopher, went public with the assassination attempt and the subsequent cover-up in a 1997 interview with The New Zealand Herald. Stuff reported the detective never thought the truth about the case would ever be revealed.