The King in Australia, Queen Elizabeth at Trooping the Colour 1981 and Princess Anne in the 1970s© Getty

6 shocking royal kidnap and assassination attempts over the years: From Princess Anne to King Charles

There have been several attempts on royal lives

TV & Film Editor
Updated: July 16, 2024

The royal family has highly trained security teams for a very important reason. 

As one of the world's most famous families, they have found themselves to be the target of assassination and kidnap plots over the decades. 

March marked 50 years since the kidnap attempt on the Princess Royal as she and her first husband, Captain Mark Phillips, were being driven down The Mall in London.

In a 1980 interview with Michael Parkinson, Princess Anne spoke about how she remained calm and refused to get out of the car. Watch below...

WATCH: Princess Anne talks about 1974 kidnap attempt

Find out more about the other terrifying situations the royals have avoided. 

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Princess Anne - 1974

Princess Anne avoided a kidnap attempt in 1974 while returning to Buckingham Palace from a charity event alongside her then-husband, Mark Phillips. While driving on the Mall, they were stopped and the would-be kidnapper, Ian Ball, began firing a gun. 

Anne's personal police officer James Beaton (pictured with Anne above), her chauffeur Alex Callender and a nearby journalist Brian McConnell all attempted to intervene and were shot. 

A passing former boxer, Ron Russell, was able to hit Ball and help Anne from the scene before another officer was shot upon arriving to help. 

All four men recovered from their injuries and were awarded various medals from Queen Elizabeth II. 

Speaking about the situation, James reflected: "I had nothing… There was no back-up vehicle. The training was non-existent; but then again, [we thought] nothing was going to happen. They are highly specialised now, highly trained."

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Queen Elizabeth II - June 1981

Crowds witnessed the shocking moment when 17-year-old Martin Serjeant was arrested for shooting a replica gun at the Queen as she rode on horseback during her birthday parade, formally known as Trooping the Colour. 

She appeared shaken by the episode but soon recovered her composure, comforting her horse, Burmese, as they continued riding in the procession down The Mall.

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Queen Elizabeth II – October 1981

Later that year, a man named Christopher John Lewis tried to kill the late Queen during her tour of New Zealand. Hiding a gun, he fired through a window at the Queen, missing her. He was arrested eight days later with public possession of a firearm and public discharging of a firearm, which surprised him at the time, as he reportedly replied: "Only two charges, what? [Expletive] ... Had the bullet hit her, would it be treason?"

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King Charles - 1994

The then-Prince of Wales remained remarkably unperturbed when a man named David Kang fired two blank shots at him back in 1994 while he was about to make a speech in Australia. 

While the man never intended any harm on the royal, instead hoping to draw attention to Australian detention centres, he was sentenced to 500 hours of community service for threatening unlawful violence.

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Prince George - 2018

In 2018, a man named Husnain Rashid was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum of 25 years for encouraging an attack on Prince George using the messaging site Telegram. 

He pleaded guilty to the offence of encouraging terrorism after sharing several suggestions on how to launch an attack as well as sharing images of George's school.

At the time, Judge Andrew Lees said during sentencing: "The message was clear - you were providing the name and address of Prince George's school, an image of Prince George's school and the instruction or threat that Prince George and other members of the Royal family should be viewed as potential targets."  

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Queen Elizabeth - 2021

In December 2021, a man named Jaswant Singh Chail admitted that he broke into the grounds of Windsor Castle with a crossbow in the hopes of killing the Queen

He was near her private apartments back in 2021 when he was apprehended, and he claimed to want revenge for the 1919 Amritsar massacre in India. 

He pleaded guilty to section two of the Treason Act as well as possession of an offensive weapon and making threats to kill. At the time, a royal protection officer questioned him, to which he replied: "I am here to kill the Queen."  

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