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Lord Lucan's wife has taken one final swipe at her estranged children from beyond the grave after cutting them out of her will. Lady Lucan left nothing to her three children - Frances, 52, George ...
THE widow of fugitive aristocrat Lord Lucan said she didn’t “fear dying alone” after never healing the rift that formed between her and the family after her husband vanished Lady … ...
The disappearance of Lord Lucan, just after he is believed to have killed his children’s nanny by mistake, remains one of Britain’s enduring criminal mysteries.
Lady Lucan — whose aristocrat husband vanished after he attacked her and killed their nanny 40 years ago — died of natural causes in her upscale London home on Wednesday, Sept. 27, at the age ...
It's one of the U.K.’s greatest and most enduring mysteries—and last night it came one step closer to finally being solved. For Britons, the Lord Lucan scandal still holds an extraordinary ...
Lord Lucan, the disappearing act that refuses to die away. The enduring fascination with the life of Lord Lucan continues in an ITV drama. James Rampton hears from the show’s stars ...
Five decades ago, Richard John Bingham vanished without a trace after his children's nanny was murdered in Belgravia in 1974 - but a new theory has come to light in BBC documentary, Lucan.
Lord Lucan 'tipped over edge' by gambling debt fury after losing £50,000 and exploding into rage minutes before nanny was bludgeoned to death, reveals croupier ...
Lord Lucan (real name Richard John Bingham) went on the run after his children's nanny was murdered with a lead pipe in his Belgravia home, and it has now been reported sinister "clues" were left ...
Born in 1934, Lucan went to Eton, did National Service in the Coldstream Guards, and briefly worked at Brandt's merchant bank in London; he failed to progress there, and a spectacular win at ...
The wife of the late Lord Lucan has issued an extraordinary apology over the murder of the family’s nanny, saying she is “deeply sad” that her own marital problems caused her to die.
Lucan – who, were he still alive, would be 81 – is deemed to have died. His son, who had sought to have a court declare his father dead, is now free to become the 8th Earl of Lucan.
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