Kate
Middleton and Prince William are feeling shock, anger, disbelief and
frustration amid wild, over-the-top speculation and vast conspiracy theories
with regard to her whereabouts and recovery progress from abdominal surgery.
ET spoke
with royal expert Katie Nicholl about how the Prince and Princess of Wales are
feeling about the swirling rumors centered around them. Nicholl tells ET that
the royal couple is astute enough to understand how social media works in this
day and age, but the constant attention is, plainly put, getting to them.
"Well,
I know from the sources that I've spoken to that both William and Kate have
been pretty shocked and genuinely surprised by the wild rumors that are
circulating on the internet," Nicholl tells ET. "I think there's a
sense of frustration, possibly even anger, certainly on William's part."
For his
part, not only has William had to look after his wife, who is still recovering
from abdominal surgery, but also the couple's three young children -- Prince
George, 10, Princess Charlotte, 8, and Prince Louis, 5. On top of that, William
is also trying to tune out the deafening noise, including unsubstantiated
claims running rampant online and elsewhere.
"I
think the suggestions that [Kate's] had, well, anything as crazy as a bad
haircut that she's needed to grow out to cosmetic surgery that's gone wrong or
people speculating that possibly she's in a coma, I think that has made the
Prince of Wales frustrated, upset and pretty angry as well," Nicholl says.
"It's been difficult for them. I think they're trying to ignore as much as
they can. But, of course, this is a couple who have had to embrace social
media. They've got an Instagram handle, they've got hundreds of thousands of
followers. They certainly don't have their heads in the sand. They are aware of
what is being written and what is being said. And I think there's a sense of
frustration that they can't bring an end to it
The sad
reality, Nicholl adds, is that the couple is likely very aware that the noise
is not going to end. Not until the public can see with their own eyes that Kate
is "back to her normal, happy, healthy self."
Which is
what makes the video footage obtained by TMZ of Kate and William a mile from
their Windsor home all the more frustrating.
"The
TMZ video really should have quashed all of the fevered speculation about the
Princess of Wales," Nicholl explains. "Her health, her recovery, and
it simply hasn't. You would have thought that the video, which showed her
walking at quite a brisk pace, carrying a shopping bag, looking pretty healthy
and happy, and chatting in a very relaxed way with her husband, would have just
dampened out all of the rife speculation that has really been circulating on
the internet for weeks now. But, unbelievably, many of those theories are still
circulating on the internet."
The wild
speculation includes that there was a body double -- a rumor and conspiracy
theory that prompted a Kate lookalike to speak out about it.
"People
think that I'm Kate Middleton in the video that's come out online," said
Heidi Egan, a British woman known for her resemblance of Kate. "Given my
alibi that, no, it wasn't me in the video. I was actually at work."
And as if
the royal couple didn't already have enough to deal with, police are now
looking into a possible breach of Kate's health records, a U.K. health minister
announced, after the U.K. tabloid The Mirror reported that The London Clinic --
where Kate was treated in January for a "planned abdominal surgery" --
has launched an investigation over claims that staff tried to access her
private medical records. The Information Commissioner's Office, Britain's data
watchdog, released a statement confirming that they are looking into the
potential breach.
because it
may have targeted the Princess of Wales, but because privacy laws are extremely
strict in the U.K. But underscoring the seriousness of the situation is the
fact that The London Clinic is equivalent to Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles or New
York-Presbyterian Hospital, two world-class facilities favored by the rich and
famous.
"The
London Clinic will be doing everything it can to assure its patients, many of
whom are high profile," says Nicholl while referencing former U.K. Prime
Minster David Cameron, who was born at that hospital. Former U.S. President
John F. Kennedy Jr. also was treated there, as are many royals, celebrities and
VIPs who insist on discretion even more so.
"The big challenge here is for The London Clinic and maintaining its standards and its reputation as being one of the most discreet clinics in London, when clearly there was a major security breach attempted during Katherine's stay," Nicholl says.
The potential
breach is reminiscent of a 2012 incident, when Australian pranksters managed to
get patched through to Kate's doctors amid her receiving treatment for severe
nausea and vomiting at London's King Edward VII Hospital while she was pregnant
with Prince George.
While the
prank only resulted in the pranksters getting transferred to Kate's doctors,
that ordeal ended in tragedy, when the nurse who transferred the call took her
own life in 2014.
Source:etonline.com
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