⚡ THE WOMAN WHO VANISHED AFTER DIANA’S CRASH At 12:30 AM, a nurse named Sabine saw Princess Diana being treated in the tunnel. She told friends the scene felt “staged” before disappearing from Paris. Where is Sabine now, and what did she witness… 👉 The clues will haunt you!
⚡ THE WOMAN WHO VANISHED AFTER DIANA’S CRASH At 12:30 AM, a nurse named Sabine saw Princess Diana being treated in the tunnel. She told friends the scene felt “staged” before disappearing from Paris. Where is Sabine now, and what did she witness… 👉 The clues will haunt you!
⚡ THE WOMAN WHO VANISHED AFTER DIANA’S CRASH At 12:30 AM, a nurse named Sabine saw Princess Diana being treated in the tunnel. She told friends the scene felt “staged” before disappearing from Paris. Where is Sabine now, and what did she witness… 👉 The clues will haunt you!
The Woman Who Vanished After Diana’s Crash
On August 31, 1997, at approximately 12:30 AM, in the chaotic aftermath of the Pont de l’Alma tunnel crash in Paris, a woman named Sabine Dauzonne emerged as a key eyewitness. Alongside her husband Georges, she reported seeing a white Fiat Uno—a vehicle central to conspiracy theories—exiting the tunnel shortly after Princess Diana’s Mercedes S280 slammed into the 13th pillar at over 105 km/h (65 mph), killing Diana, Dodi Fayed, and driver Henri Paul, while critically injuring bodyguard Trevor Rees-Jones. Dauzonne described the Fiat’s driver as tanned and agitated, with a muzzled dog in the back and a shattered taillight, details that matched forensic evidence from the Mercedes. Yet, claims that she was a “nurse” who witnessed Diana’s treatment in the tunnel and felt the scene “staged” before “disappearing from Paris” appear to be a conflation of facts and fringe speculation. No credible records confirm Dauzonne as a nurse or her presence at the treatment site; she and her husband identified suspect Le Van Thanh in a lineup but provided no “staged” account. This article dissects the rumor, the real witnesses, and why Sabine’s story haunts conspiracy lore nearly three decades later.

The Crash: Chaos in the Tunnel
Diana, aged 36 and a humanitarian icon post-divorce from Prince Charles, arrived in Paris on August 30 with Dodi Fayed, son of billionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed. Pursued by paparazzi, they dined at the Ritz Hotel before departing at 12:20 AM in the Mercedes, driven by deputy security chief Henri Paul. A decoy failed, and motorbikes gave chase. At 12:23 AM, the car entered the dimly lit Pont de l’Alma tunnel, clipped the white Fiat Uno, swerved, and crashed into the pillar.
Paul and Dodi died instantly; Rees-Jones survived with severe injuries. Diana, unseated in the rear, was conscious, murmuring “My God, what’s happened?” to off-duty doctor Frederic Mailliez, who arrived first and flagged for help. Firefighters led by Xavier Gourmelon reached the scene at 12:32 AM, followed by SAMU medics at 12:40 AM, including Dr. Jean-Marc Martino, who stabilized her with an IV drip before extraction at 1:00 AM. She arrived at Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital at 2:06 AM and died at 4:00 AM from a severed pulmonary vein.
The first emergency call was at 12:26 AM, delayed by poor mobile signals. Paparazzi swarmed, some photographing rather than aiding, leading to arrests and confiscated films.
Sabine Dauzonne: The Real Witness

Sabine Dauzonne and her husband Georges were driving near the tunnel when they heard the crash. They reported seeing the white Fiat Uno emerge from the westbound lane shortly after, driven erratically by a man glancing in his rearview mirror, with a damaged muffler, shattered taillight, and muzzled dog—possibly a Rottweiler—in the back. Paint traces and a taillight fragment on the Mercedes matched a 1983-1989 Fiat Uno, confirming a glancing collision that likely caused the swerve.
The Dauzonnes identified Le Van Thanh, a 22-year-old Paris taxi driver and security guard, from photos as a possible match for the driver. Thanh owned a white Fiat Uno, resprayed it hours post-crash, and claimed an alibi (night shift at a Renault factory), though he left early and visited his father near the tunnel—unverified by police. He denied involvement and died in 2021 without resolution.
No sources describe Sabine as a nurse treating Diana in the tunnel at 12:30 AM. Medical responders were Mailliez (off-duty doctor), Gourmelon (firefighter), and SAMU’s Martino (anesthetist). A separate unverified rumor involves an unidentified nurse at the hospital to whom Diana allegedly whispered final wishes, but investigators could not locate her despite checking rotas. This may be the “vanished nurse” conflated with Dauzonne.
The “Staged” Scene Rumor and Disappearance Myth
Claims that Sabine witnessed a “staged” treatment scene before vanishing stem from conspiracy circles, amplified by Mohamed Al-Fayed, who alleged MI6 assassination to prevent Diana’s marriage to Dodi or a pregnancy (disproven by autopsy). French protocol’s on-site stabilization (20 minutes for Diana) contrasted with UK “scoop and run,” fueling delay theories. Witnesses like François Levistre reported a “white flash” from a motorbike, dismissed due to inconsistencies.
Dauzonne did not claim the scene felt “staged”; her testimony focused on the Fiat. No evidence shows she disappeared—Operation Paget (2004-2006 UK probe) reviewed her statements without noting absence. The 1999 French inquiry and 2008 inquest ruled unlawful killing by negligence: Paul’s impairment, speed, and paparazzi pursuit.
Proportionality bias drives myths: Diana’s death seems too monumental for accident. Absent CCTV (1997 tech limits), sealed files (until 2082), and the untraced Fiat perpetuate speculation.
Where Is Sabine Now? The Haunting Clues

Sabine Dauzonne’s current whereabouts are unknown publicly; post-inquest, witnesses faded from spotlight. No reports confirm vanishing or threats. The “clues” haunting enthusiasts—the Fiat’s dog, shattered light, agitated driver—remain unresolved, symbolizing investigative frustrations. Thanh’s alibi gaps and respray fuel “cover-up” narratives, but Paget found no foul play.
Paparazzi faced fines but no charges, prompting media reforms. In 2025, social media revives rumors, but official accounts hold: tragedy from negligence.
Diana’s legacy—Diana Award, sons’ advocacy—endures. Sabine’s tale, likely mythologized, haunts as a ghost in the Fiat’s shadow, a reminder of gaps where truth eludes.
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