DRAMATIC ROYAL REVEAL!
Queen Camilla’s forgotten teenage nightmare resurfaces: assaulted by a stranger on a train at 16 years old, she fought him off with one brutal move 👠👑
👉 The dark truth behind her courage is finally exposed…
——————
Queen Camilla was assaulted as a teenager and fought off her attacker with a shoe, a new royal book has claimed.
The royal is said to have been on a train to Paddington as a 16 or 17-year-old schoolgirl when a man attempted to touch her.
The revelation emerged in an upcoming book by former royal correspondent Valentine Low, titled Power and the Palace: The Inside Story of the Monarchy and 10 Downing Street, serialised in The Times.
Camilla is alleged to have told Boris Johnson her ordeal in 2008, when he was invited to meet her at Clarence House as the newly elected mayor of London.
She is said to have told Mr Johnson that ‘some guy was moving his hand further and further’.
Detailing what happened, the then Duchess of Cornwall allegedly ‘did what my mother taught me to’ – taking off her high heel and hitting the attacker with it.
The Mail understands that while she has never sought to make her own experience public, the Queen is pragmatic it has now been reported publicly.
A source close to her said: ‘If reading about her own experience helps other women, then in the circumstances she would consider that a positive outcome.’

+4
View gallery
Queen Camilla attends the Service of Remembrance to commemorate the 80th Anniversary of VJ Day at the National Memorial Arboretum in Alrewas on August 15

+4
View gallery
Queen Camilla is said to have been on a train to Paddington as a 16 or 17-year-old when a man attempted to touch her. Pictured: Camilla (left) when younger
Friends say the incident is something she has never hidden from family and friends.
Indeed she has, they say, also privately discussed it with some of the individuals and organisations she has worked with over the past decade in the field of sexual assault and domestic violence.
But she has never wanted to equate her experience, however unpleasant and unwarranted, with some of the tragic and heartbreaking stories that other women have bravely chosen to share with her over the years.
‘Her experience, alas, was as familiar to many women then as it is, sadly, today. And clearly, totally unacceptable,’ a source told the Mail.
‘But she has never wanted to equate what she went through as a young woman with the stories that so many victims and survivors have had the courage to share with her over her past decade of campaigning on the issue.
‘This is not because of any sense of shame. It simply happened a very long time ago and she dealt with it. She has always taken the view that other women’s stories are much more important than her own.’
Friends are also at pains to stress that the experience wasn’t responsible for inspiring her public work, which has always very much been about the women who have needed her help.
But they feel it has given her a certain amount of empathy and understanding about some of the experiences they have undergone.

+4
View gallery
King Charles and his wife Queen Camilla at Royal Ascot, Day 5, on June 21 this year
Victims of sexual assault are granted lifelong legal anonymity to protect their identities from being published in the media on or social media forums.
However the book says that the account came from former Prime Minister Boris Johnson who met with Camilla, then Duchess of Cornwall, at Clarence House, her London residence, in 2008 when he was Mayor of London.
The Queen first visited a crisis centre for victims of rape and sexual assault in Croydon, south London, in 2009 as Duchess of Cornwall.
She was so moved by the stories she heard and of the Rape and Sexual Abuse Support Centre’s need for practical and financial support that she determined to make the issue a cornerstone of her public work. It is one she has insisted on continuing as Queen.
Over the years she has worked tirelessly to highlight organisations supporting victims of rape and sexual support, meeting survivors and shining a light on the organisations that support them.
In 2013 she held a ground-breaking reception in London, bringing together national stakeholders and key decision-makers in the field. It was the first time in the UK that such a wide range of organisation had been drawn together to specifically discuss rape and sexual abuse.
That same year she started her ‘washbags’ project to provide victims with toiletries such as shampoo, shower gel and toothbrush’s to use after undergoing gruelling forensic examinations in the aftermath of an assault.
Camilla said she wanted to offer them a touch of comfort and normality at such a traumatic time in their lives.
She has also visited many centres worldwide in countries as diverse as the USA, India, and the Balkans.
Recently she became patron of the Mirabel Centre in Nigeria, the country’s first sexual assault referral centre.
The Queen is also closely associated with several organisations in the UK – including Safe Lives and WOW! – both of which campaign in the field.
In 2021 she gave a speech about the stigma and shame that survivors often face, saying: ‘Rapists are not born, they are constructed. And it takes an entire community – male and female – to dismantle the lies, words and actions that foster a culture in which sexual assault is seen as normal, and in which it shames the victim.’
Over the years Camilla has also expanded her work to help the victims and survivors of domestic abuse.
In November last year, an ITV documentary followed the Queen’s campaign work – including a poignant moment where she sat at a small table in a women’s refuge talking with a domestic abuse survivor.
‘I’m probably just as nervous as you,’ she tells Natalie, whose identity has been protected.
She then listens intently to the survivor’s heartbreaking story about how her ‘funny and charming’ partner turned into an abusive monster who would beat her ‘sometimes for days’.
In the film, the Queen said domestic abuse should not be a taboo subject, and called for it to be talked about more openly.
News
Heartbreaking: The suspect in the accident involving three high school girls, Iris Ramos Cruz, Yaritzi Flores-Romero, and Melissa Romero-Espinoza, has just confessed his MOTIVE, but what he recounted about the last 30 seconds is truly haunting
Othello Teens Remembered for Joy, Love After Deadly Crash OTHELLO – Three 15-year-old Othello High School students are being remembered for their vibrant personalities, close family ties and lasting impact on those around them following a deadly rollover crash Sunday…
THE TRUCK IN THE CANAL — Three Othello High School girls were ejected from a rolling car and pronounced dead… but surveillance later picked up a second vehicle leaving seconds after impact — and one frame investigators flagged ends at :17 before the footage cuts — the full clip is now part of the case file
3 High School Girls Die After Ex-Boyfriend Allegedly Crashed Their Vehicle into Canal and Fled the Scene: Police “Our hearts are with their families, friends, and all who knew and loved them,” a school official said about the three teens…
THE MOMENT THAT CHANGED THE TIMELINE: Authorities say Janette MacAusland left her Wellesley home late Friday, but a digital log recorded less than 12 minutes earlier is now drawing attention — after revealing a detail that doesn’t match the rest of the timeline
The Digital Echo in the Dark: Why a Twelve Minute Window is Shaking the MacAusland Case The disappearance of Janette MacAusland from her opulent Wellesley estate was initially framed as the tragic byproduct of a high-stakes divorce. The narrative was…
A LINE THAT CHANGED THE TIMELINE: Samuel MacAusland has acknowledged the ongoing custody dispute — but investigators say a single sentence sent from Janette’s phone late Friday may now explain what happened next
The Digital Breadcrumb That Rewrote a Mystery The intersection of domestic tragedy and digital forensics has never been more chillingly illustrated than in the ongoing investigation into the disappearance of Janette MacAusland. For weeks, the public narrative was dominated by…
THE LAST CONTACT: Authorities say the final exchange between Janette MacAusland and someone close to her lasted under 40 seconds — and the last line from that conversation is now part of the timeline investigators are focusing on
THE LAST CONTACT: Authorities Say the Final Exchange Between Janette MacAusland and Someone Close to Her Lasted Under 40 Seconds — And the Last Line from That Conversation Is Now Part of the Timeline Investigators Are Focusing On In the…
New development: Samuel MacAusland has now spoken about the custody battle with Janette MacAusland — but investigators say a 3-word message she sent just before 9 p.m. is now being reviewed for what it may have meant
New Development: Samuel MacAusland Speaks Out on Custody Battle with Janette MacAusland as Investigators Scrutinize Her Final 3-Word Message Sent Just Before 9 p.m. In the affluent Boston suburb of Wellesley, Massachusetts, a bitter divorce and child custody dispute that…
End of content
No more pages to load