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John William Tuohy lives in Washington DC

The Attempted kidnapping of Princess Anne





On March 20, 1974, an armed madman named Ian Ball tried to kidnap Britain's
Princess Anne IV. On that day the princess, then 23, was traveling back to Buckingham Palace after attending a charity event on Pall Mall (A road that runs between London’s Trafalgar Square and Buckingham Palace) with her husband, Captain Mark Phillips and her Lady in Waiting. It was about 8 PM.


Ball, who had a history of psychiatric problems and had been diagnosed a schizophrenic, thought Princess Anne would be an easy target and, amazingly enough he had learned her movements simply by telephoning the Buckingham Palace press office. He said: ‘I had thought about it for years… She would have been the easiest. I have seen her riding with her husband.”
That night, Ball who had been following the royal’s in a Ford Escort, caught up with the royals car on the Pall Mall and cut it off.  Blocking the road, Ball leaped out of the car, a pistol in his hand. He purchased them in Spain a month before)
“I thought” said Police Inspector Jim Beaton, the Princesses security officer “it was somebody who wanted to be a pain in the neck. There was no hint of what was to happen.”
What happened was that Ian Ball fired through the front windshield of the royals car hitting Inspector Beaton in the shoulder.  Beaton pulled his service weapon a Walther PPK and tried to return fire, but the gun jammed.


Ian Ball called out for Beaton to drop his weapon or he would shoot the princess. Ball then ran over to the car and tried to force open the door. The chauffeur, Alex Callender, rushed Ball and tried to disarm him but was shot. 
Alex Callender

Brian McConnell, a tabloid journalist who was standing on the Mall intervened and said “Don’t be silly, old boy. “Put the gun down.” Ball shot him.
Brian McConnell

By then Officer Beaton leaped into the back beside the royal couple. Ball fired again and this time Beaton put up his own arm to obstruct the bullet. He was shot through the hand and then shot in the abdomen.

With Inspector Beaton down, Ball ran to the car’s back door and pulled it open,  grabbed Anne’s forearm as her  husband  held onto her waist.


“Please, come out,” Ball said to Anne. “You’ve got to come” to which she replied, “Not bloody likely.”
As the two men struggled over Anne, her dress ripped, splitting down the back.
“I was frightened, I won’t mind admitting it,” Captain Phillips later said.
When Police constable Michael Hills ran to the scene, Ball shot him as well. 
Hills 

Ronnie Russell, a 6’4 amateur heavyweight boxer, the father of three was driving from work in central London and took a short cut near the Pall Mall when he noticed Ian Ball driving erratically towards Buckingham Palace.

Sensing something was wrong, Russel turned his car around and drove towards the palace, where, close to the gates he saw Ian Ball’s four victims  lying on the ground, wounded, while Ball was wrestling Princess Anne.
Russell ran up to Ball and punched him in the back of the head. Ball fired a shot at him but missed. Russell reached for a fallen Constables nightstick and Ball, seeing an opening, returned his attention to the Princess when Russell landed a punch squarely on Ball’s jaw.
 “I hit Ball very hard.” Russell said  “He was flat on the floor face down. I jumped on his back for good measure. I could have died, yeah, but I knew what I was doing. The only person I did not want to get shot was Princess Anne.”


Ball stood up and ran.  Another Constable named Peter Edmonds, a temporary detective constable, had heard Officer Hills’ calls and ran to the scene just as Ball fled. Edmonds chased him and his coat over Ball’s head and tackled him.
Once arrested, Ball, then 26, said ‘I suppose I’ll be locked up for the rest of my life. I am only sorry I frightened Princess Anne. There is one good thing coming out of this: you will have to improve on her protection.’

When he was searched, police found close to $1,000 in the unemployed Ball’s pockets. They also learned that he had recently rented an apartment five miles away from Sandhurst Military Academy, which was also the home of Princess Anne and Captain Phillips.
Ball had rented the car under the name of John Williams. Inside the vehicle, police found two pairs of handcuffs, Valium tranquilizers, and a typed ransom letter addressed to the Queen that demanded 2 million pounds for the Princesses  ransom to be delivered in £5 sterling notes. 

He also wanted the loot stored in 20 unlocked suitcases and put on a plane destined for Switzerland, and, as if that weren’t enough, he also wanted the Queen herself to appear on the plane to confirm the authenticity of her signatures on needed paperwork. He said later that he intended to give the money to the National Health Service, to be used to improve the care and treatment of psychiatric patients.
Ball

When asked if he was part of the Irish Republican Army he said  ‘I have got no friends. I’m a loner. I put a lot of thought and work into it. ‘I can’t expect people like you to understand or accept that I did it and planned it alone. Do you think I am part of the IRA or something? If there had been anyone else they would have helped me at the scene. I knew [Inspector Beaton] would be armed. If his gun had not jammed, I would be dead.’

Princess Anne visiting her bodyguard, Inspector James Beaton, at Westminster Hospital in London

Officer Hills

Otherwise he had no remorse for wounding the four men. ‘They were getting in my way, so I had to shoot them. Well, the police, that’s their job. They expect to be shot. I took a chance of getting shot so why shouldn’t they?’

Constables Hills and Edmond (cener)

“I am not surprised about the lack of remorse” Inspector Beaton said “because he was mentally ill. But in a sense his comments about Royal security were right. Nobody expected anything like that to happen, not even with the IRA. We took precautions but nothing like you have today.”

Ball, face covered 

Ian Ball was charged with attempted murder, wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, and attempting to kidnap Princess Anne. He pleaded guilty to two of the attempted murder charges and to the kidnapping charge. The Crown dropped the other charges. He was sentenced to a life term in a mental health facility called Broadmoor, a high-security psychiatric hospital.  In 1983, Ball wrote to a number of government officials that the attempted kidnapping was a hoax, and that he was framed.
Queen Elizabeth  awarded the George Cross, Britain’s highest civilian award for courage, to Inspector Beaton. In 1983,  Scotland Yard reorganized the Royalty Protection Branch and placed Beaton as its superintendent. 
The Queen  also presented Police Constable Hills and Ronald Russell, with the George Medal, the second-highest civilian honor for bravery. Police Constable Edmonds, John Brian McConnell and Alexander Callender were awarded the Queen’s Gallantry medal.  Glenmore Martin received the Queen’s Commendation for Brave Conduct. While handing Roland Russell his medal she whispered “The medal is from the Queen of England. The thank you is from Anne’s mother”
When the Queen learned that Russel was about to lose his home, she paid off his mortgage.


Princess Anne and Capt Mark Phillips (left) during the Mall kidnap attempt. Second left to right Royal Chauffeur Alexander Callender, Inspector James Beaton, Glanmore and Martin and Russell, far right