Michael Fagan (born 8 August 1948) is a British citizen who intruded into Queen Elizabeth II's bedroom in Buckingham Palace in 1982.
Early life
Michael Fagan was
born in Clerkenwell, London, on 8 August 1948, the son of Ivy and Michael Fagan, Sr. His father was a steel erector and a "champion" safe-breaker. He
had two younger sisters, Marjorie and Elizabeth. In 1955, he attended Compton Street
School in Clerkenwell (later St Peter & St Paul RC Primary School). In
1966, he left home at 18 to escape his father, who, Fagan says, was violent. He
started working as a painter and decorator. In 1972, he married Christine, with
whom he had four children (she left him the year of the break-ins, but later
came back). At some point in the 1970s–1980s, Fagan was a member of a North
London branch of the Workers
Revolutionary Party.
Break-ins
First entry
In early July 1982, Fagan intruded into Buckingham Palace. He stated that he shimmied up a drainpipe and
startled a housemaid, who called security. He disappeared before guards
arrived, who then disbelieved the housemaid's report. Fagan said he then
entered the palace through an unlocked window on the roof and wandered around
for the next half-hour while eating cheese and crackers. Three alarms in total
were tripped, but the police turned them off, believing they were faulty. He
viewed royal portraits and sat for some time on a throne. He also spoke of
entering the postroom. He drank a half bottle of white wine, became tired, and
left.
Second entry
At around 7:00 a.m. on 9 July 1982, Fagan scaled Buckingham
Palace's 14-foot-high (4.3 m) perimeter wall, which was topped with revolving
spikes and barbed wire, and climbed up a drainpipe. An alarm sensor detected
his movements, but police thought the alarm was faulty and silenced it. Fagan
wandered the corridors for several minutes before reaching the royal
apartments. In an anteroom, Fagan broke a glass ashtray, cutting his hand. He
entered the bedroom of Queen Elizabeth
II at about 7:15 a.m. carrying a fragment of glass.
The Queen woke when Fagan disturbed a curtain. Initial
reports said he had sat on the edge of her bed; however, Fagan said in a 2012
interview that the Queen left the room immediately to seek security. The Queen
phoned the palace switchboard twice for police, but none arrived, so she used
her bedside alarm bell; she also beckoned a housemaid in the corridor, who was
quickly dispatched to seek urgent help. The duty footman, Paul Whybrew, who had been walking the Queen's dogs, arrived,
followed by two policemen on palace duty, who removed Fagan. The incident had
happened as the armed police officer outside the royal bedroom came off duty before
his replacement arrived.
A subsequent police report was critical of the competence of
officers on duty, as well as a system of confused and divided command. The Home Secretary, who held sole
responsibility for the police, William
Whitelaw, offered his resignation but it was refused by the Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher.
Arrest
Since Fagan's actions were, at the time, a civil wrong
rather than a criminal offense, he was not charged with trespassing in the
Queen's bedroom. He was charged with theft of the wine, but the charges were
dropped when he was committed for psychiatric evaluation. In late July, Fagan's
mother said, "He thinks so much of
the Queen. I can imagine him just wanting to simply talk and say hello and discuss
his problems." He spent the next three months in a psychiatric
hospital before being released on 21 January 1983.
It was not until 2007, when Buckingham Palace became a "designated site" for the
purposes of section 128 of the Serious Organized
Crime and Police Act 2005, that trespass at the palace became a criminal
offense.
Later life
Two years after entering Buckingham Palace, Fagan attacked a
policeman at a café in Fishguard, Wales, and was given a three-month suspended
sentence. In 1983, Fagan recorded a cover version of the Sex Pistols song "God Save the Queen" with punk
band the Bollock Brothers. In 1997, he was imprisoned for four years after he,
his wife, and their 20-year-old son Arran were charged with conspiring to supply
heroin.
Fagan made an appearance in Channel 4's The Antics Roadshow, an hour-long 2011 TV documentary
directed by the artist Banksy and Jaimie
D'Cruz charting the history of people behaving oddly in public.
After the death of the Queen on 8 September 2022, Fagan told
reporters that he had lit a candle in her memory at a local church.
In fiction
The intrusion was adapted in 2012 for an episode of Sky Arts' Playhouse Presents series
entitled "Walking the Dogs",
a one-off British comedy-drama featuring Emma
Thompson as the Queen and Eddie
Marsan as the intruder. In 2020, Tom
Brooke played Fagan in the fifth episode of season 4 of The Crown. The intrusion also inspired Trinidadian
calypso singer Mighty Sparrow to
write his ironic song "Phillip My
Dear", very loosely based on the event.
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