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Trevor Rees-Jones (also known as Trevor Rees; born 3 March 1968) is a British author and former bodyguard who was badly injured and the only survivor in the car crash in Paris that killed Diana, Princess of Wales, in 1997. Because he sustained a serious head injury, he does not recall any details from the crash.
Trevor D. Rees-Jones was born in 1951. He grew up in University Park, Texas, Dallas, the eldest of three children of Trevor William Rees-Jones (1923–2009) and Billye June Kay of Dallas (1924–2008). [1] [2] He achieved the rank of Eagle Scout out of Boy Scout Troop 70 in 1966. [3] His father was a lawyer with Locke Liddell & Sapp in Dallas. [4]
In 1995, he married Sue Jones (previously, Rees-Jones's name had been Trevor Rees, but he added his wife's surname upon their marriage) a former buyer for Harrods, where Rees-Jones was employed as ...
The company was founded in Dallas in 1994 by Trevor Rees-Jones. [2] In June 2006, the company sold a leasehold interest in 169,000 net acres with proved reserves of 617 billion cubic feet of natural gas equivalent to Devon Energy for $2.2 billion in cash. It also sold midstream assets to Crosstex Energy for $480 million in cash. [3] [4]
Diana and Fayed’s bodyguard, Trevor Rees-Jones, were critically injured. Image credits: Roméo / Pexels Immediately, firefighters arrived at the scene to transport the two to emergency services.
Trevor Rees-Jones, Rees-Jones Oil & Minerals owner: $6.66 billion. Thai Lee, SHI International Corporation CEO: $6.32 billion. This article originally appeared on Lubbock Avalanche-Journal: Who is ...
Trevor Rees-Jones may refer to: Trevor Rees-Jones (bodyguard) (born 1968), also known as Trevor Rees, British bodyguard to Diana, Princess of Wales Trevor Rees-Jones (businessman) (born 1951), American attorney, business executive and philanthropist
Luc Chikhani is a French oral and maxillofacial surgeon best known for reconstructing the face of Trevor Rees-Jones, [1] the former bodyguard of Dodi Fayed, after the car crash that killed Diana, Princess of Wales, Dodi Fayed, and their driver, Henri Paul. He was interviewed in Rees-Jones's book The Bodyguard's Story. [2]