Thomas Kingston died by ‘catastrophic wound’ to the head, with a gun nearby

Thomas Kingston passed away a week ago, on Sunday, February 25. His death was not announced until Tuesday, the 27th, just hours after King Constantine’s memorial service in Windsor, a service which was attended by Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, Kingston’s parents-in-law. Kingston’s now-widow, Lady Gabriella, did not attend the memorial service, nor has she been seen in public since about a week before Kingston’s passing. On Friday, the inquest into Thomas Kington’s death officially began. The police and the coroner came out and said, flat out, that he died of a “catastrophic wound” to the head, with a gun closeby. The Telegraph was the first British outlet to say that it was suicide.

Thomas Kingston, the husband of Lady Gabriella Windsor, died from a gunshot wound to the head, a coroner has revealed. Mr Kingston, 45, took his own life at his parents’ home in a Cotswold village on Sunday.

Katy Skerrett, senior coroner for Gloucestershire, said the financier, the son-in-law of Prince and Princess Michael of Kent, had lunch with his parents before his father, Martin Kingston, took the dogs out for a walk. As she opened an inquest into Mr Kingston’s death, Ms Skerett said: “On his return Mr Kingston was not in the house.”

His mother went to look for him before his father forced entry into an outbuilding. Ms Skerrett said Mr Kingston was found dead “with a catastrophic head injury. A gun was present at the scene.”

Mr Kingston was a committed Christian who once worked as a hostage negotiator in Iraq. Known as Tom, he read economic history at the University of Bristol before joining the diplomatic missions unit at the Foreign Office. He was seconded to Baghdad as project manager for the International Centre for Reconciliation, based at Coventry Cathedral, in 2003. The following year, he cheated death in a suicide bombing in the Iraqi capital that killed 22 people.

Mr Kingston returned to the UK to work for Schroders, the global asset management firm, as an equity analyst before becoming the managing director of Voltan Capital Management and later a director of Devonport Capital, which provides short-term loans to businesses operating in the developing world. His father, Martin, was a hugely successful barrister, specialising in planning law. Also a devout Chrisitan, he was elected to the General Synod in 2016. His mother, Jill, is a trustee of a Chrsitian healing centre and runs the Nadezhda Charitable Trust, which supports projects in Zimbabwe.

[From The Telegraph]

Before this past week, I’ll admit that I didn’t know much about Kingston’s background and, considering his romantic life, I always assumed he was just some random posh bloke with a good education but few real-world experiences. Hearing all of these stories about his time in Iraq, it makes me realize that he had been in some really dire situations and was probably quite haunted by them. This whole situation is so sad and confusing. His parents must be devastated, and poor Ella as well. We hope that they have friends and family around them at this difficult time.

Incidentally, the Daily Mail’s Richard Kay and Sam Greenhill also did a somewhat strange eulogy in which they seemingly used this man’s suicide as a way to bash Prince Harry, writing in part: “[Gabriella and Thomas] did not live extravagant lives or find themselves the target of the paparazzi. In many ways their unfussy approach — home is a modest flat in fashionable Notting Hill which they had recently put on the market pending a move somewhere larger — would serve as a valuable life lesson for some of Ella’s royal cousins.” Ah, yes, how dare Ella’s royal cousin move away from his toxic, abusive family for his own mental health when he could have lived a modest, unfussy life in England… like Thomas Kingston.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images.

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109 Responses to “Thomas Kingston died by ‘catastrophic wound’ to the head, with a gun nearby”

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  1. Snuffles says:

    Is there a reason why the press isn’t saying the word “suicide” or “apparent suicide”? Because it makes me have questions.

    • Astra says:

      British libel laws are much stricter than in the U.S. and affect when and how information is published.

      • Nerd says:

        It didn’t seem to stop them from illegally printing excerpts of a private letter from a daughter to her …, but yes I can see that in this case they might actually be respecting laws and regulations of journalism.

    • Brassy Rebel says:

      The coroner has established a cause of death but hasn’t yet publicly announced the manner of death.

    • Leesa says:

      The article does say “took his own life,” which is a slightly gentler way of saying the same thing.

      • Angie says:

        Too bad the tabloids didn’t lament the fact that H could’ve been a great source of support for treating PTSD. Bc that’s the real tragedy here. He had someone in his life who’d dealt with similar issues and could connect him to resources.,

      • Beeks says:

        I’m certified in suicude prevention and was taught that it’s really important to strike the term “committed suicide” from our vernacular but instead to say “took his/her/their life.” Depression, anxiety and PTSD are mental illnesses and those people who succumb to them should not be described in judgmental language. One commits a crime. No one says “he committed cancer or he committed diabetes.” Thank you for allowing me to pass this along.

      • LynnInTX says:

        @Beeks I’m slightly confused, and would like clarification, because I thought the nonjudgmental thing to say is someone “died by/from suicide”, like we say someone “died from cancer”, because using “committed” or “took (their own) life” was the judgmental phrasing? I want to be using the correct terms and phrasing. Is this a case of two countries separated by a common language kind of thing?

      • Beeks says:

        @Lynnintx, “died by suicide” is absolutely acceptable. What my training emphasized is the hope of eradicating the verb “committed” as it can be construed as judgmental to the sufferer and stigmatizing to the surviving family of the deceased.

    • Amy Bee says:

      Press around the world have been encouraged by suicide prevention organisations and other groups not to used trigger words like suicide and to change how they write about these tragic events. I think we call read between the lines what happened without having to spell it out.

    • Jas says:

      The press have to follow quite strict rules about reporting on this kind of thing, at least in part because they worry about copy cats. So you get all this weird reporting where they just say there are no suspicious circumstances and don’t say anything else too explicit about what happened.

    • MoxyLady007 says:

      There are so many people who suffer so much inside. I wish his family all the best in trying to heal from this devastating loss. And I hope he has found peace.

  2. Brassy Rebel says:

    Well, Ella and Thomas are not grandchildren of the late queen or children of the current king which probably explains why they could live such a quiet Nothing Hill life without being chased by the paps.

    It really is sad about Thomas Kingston. What makes it even sadder is there are now all sorts of rumors on social media about HIM even without any real evidence. He is being dragged into the Wales melodrama unfortunately. May he rest in peace 🕊️.

  3. KitKat says:

    In every photo I’ve seen of her, she is always beaming. Hard to believe she is related to Princess Michael.

    Also, why would they compare the living situation of the daughter of the second cousin to the king who is married to a non-royal to Harry’s situation? They conveniently failed to mention the posh home her brother, Lord Freddie Windsor, and his American actress wife live in.

    • Jan says:

      If they don’t mention Harry, no one would read the article.

      • Agnes says:

        The BM writers just can’t get anything past the copy editor’s desk without at least implying that Harry and Meghan have too many bathrooms. How disrespectful of a real tragedy, to bring their obsessive hatred into an obit.

    • WiththeAmerican says:

      Royalists are fuming that mere commenters on Reddit “speculated” about his death, but they’re fine with BM using his death to beat up H and M. so, really, they don’t care about this man or his family.

      They’re too rabid with hate for H and M to see how they look to the world.

    • Fortuona says:

      KitKat
      Freddie’s wife is an English actress who was Big Sue from the Peep Show and in the later seasons of 2 and a 1/2 Men

    • Jensa says:

      From what I’ve seen, Princess Michael absolutely worships her ghastly son (Lord Freddie) and will make excuses for him until the cows come home. His drug problems, his failure to stick to a legal career even at the trainee stage (too much like hard work – I had dealings with him briefly at this point through my work, and he truly is awful), etc., she has always had an excuse for her precious darling.
      I get the impression Gabriella was pretty much ignored. And she’s lived her life very much under the radar.
      For what it’s worth, Freddie’s wife is pretty ghastly too. A posh nepo kid, she has a history of bleating to the press about Harry & Meghan – along the lines of, what is Meghan moaning about, because she (Freddie’s wife) was welcomed with open arms into the BRF. Although she’s only married in to someone who is 50-something in line to the throne. Which is not quite the same, is it.

      • Fortuona says:

        How the fxxx is Sophie a nepo kid when none of her relatives were actors or in showbiz apart from her 1/2 sister who was at that point was presenting shitty shows when shw went to college . Her parents are /were authors . She went to Cambridge and was in Footlights

        And exactly what did she say about HM that was bad

        And he was training to be an entertainment solicitor after working as a music journo for Tatler but got into banking instead

  4. Harper says:

    Now I’m wondering if Burger King’s personal reason for pulling out of the memorial service was that he didn’t want to see the Kents.

    • Shawna says:

      That would imply William has sensitive or shame.

      • Andrea says:

        He is sensitive and has shame which are not good qualities; what he lacks is empathy.

    • OriginalLeigh says:

      I’m confused. What does William have to do with any of this? Why would he want/need to avoid the Kents?

      • Harper says:

        Because the press immediately said William’s absence had nothing to do with Mr. Kingston’s death, which makes us wonder if he did.

  5. MSS says:

    If Mr. Kingston committed suicide, then why wasn’t it reported like “Thomas Kingston died of a self inflicted gunshot to the head”, rather than him having a catastrophic head injury with a gun found near his body? Also, does anyone else find it disrespectful that Mr. Kingston is referred to as “Pippa Middleton’s Ex” rather than “Lady Gabriella’s Husband”, much of the time?

    • Snuffles says:

      IKR!? Why such wonky wording? It’s giving me Sherlock “A Study in Pink” vibes.

    • Eurydice says:

      Perhaps they’re only allowed to say exactly what the coroner reported?

    • SussexWatcher says:

      This is what I’m curious about too, mss. Why doesn’t the coroner’s report say gunshot wound to the head? They don’t even have to/should not say self-inflicted since the police investigation would determine that. But a catastrophic wound could mean many things.

    • Kit says:

      Mss, yes l.do, Tom actually denied romantic links with Pippa M. I also read about him this week, he seemed to be a popular lovely man and Ella always looked so happy when they where pictured together. Poor soul, may he rest in peace.

      • Giddy says:

        This is so sad. It sounds as if he was a lovely person. I understand that he was overwhelmed by PTSD or problems, but he left such devastation for Gabriella.

    • Jensa says:

      There are very strict rules in the UK about what can and cannot be said in the press about a suspected suicide. Once the inquest has happened (because the inquest is the legal process that rules on the cause of death), that is when they can be more explicit.

  6. Basi says:

    @snuffles I too have questions.
    The press throwing PW name in with this is also curious. (Easter egg?) Never heard of the guy until this week and would not link the two on my own. Hmm.

    • SussexWatcher says:

      Yeah. The rota rats strident denials that Pegs had nothing, NOTHING I say, to do with his death was so bizarre and telling. It makes me think he was with him or something. Because that reporting came out of nowhere and no one was asking that question.

      • Crystal says:

        Guilty so they gave it away- before the PRINCE even canceled
        Knowing why and when and all the what’s. Tragic loss, another person dealing with demons. I was on the drug overdose bus. The wording is weird but it has to do with respect. I believe, The Kent’s didn’t want to give Wills a reason not to attend the memorial, he broke the news. They wanted it under wraps another day. Poor Ella they report she fainted at the queens funeral 🙁 if they were the blind item, royal divorce, selling their FLAT home, chumming with his parents. This is sad

      • Digital Unicorn says:

        May he now rest in peace and blessings to his family.

        To add to this – it was all over SM that he and Peggy had been partying at Highgrove so not sure if there is any true to it.

      • February pisces says:

        Literally no one thought willies absence had anything to do with Thomas’s death, until the rota said ‘it didn’t’. They are either so incredibly dumb, or they are stir the pot.

  7. sevenblue says:

    I think there was a typo (the name of the day was wrong) on the date for the end of press embargo on reporting his death. It seemed to me, the date was edited so it is reported on the same day of the memorial service probably to take pressure off from Will’s non-attendance. Anyone noticed this or do I misremember it?

    • Agnes says:

      I remember it. They had Thursday February 27 typed when Thursday was actually the 29.

    • WiththeAmerican says:

      I remember reading it was supposed to be embargoed for three days but got reported early, on the day William was MIA.

      Does that match with what you were thinking?

    • sevenblue says:

      @Agnes, @WiththeAmerican, thank you for confirming! I think they purposefully lifted the embargo early (reported on Tuesday instead of Thursday) , so the press would get something to report on instead of Will, but it didn’t work. In a worse turn of events, people online started to think that it was the reason for Will’s absence. I still read conspiracies about the poor man’s death because of it. BRF is the worst.

      • Harper says:

        Yes I feel for the family who was asking to grieve in true privacy for a number of days, only for their wish to be thrown under the bus as a distraction because Peggy ghosted the memorial. It is way too harsh a price for Ella and the Kingstons to pay because of their proximity to the Wales circus.

      • Juno says:

        @Sevenblue, that’s my theory, too. Will’s team pushed out the news of this poor man’s death as cover, and then it came back to bite Will.

        I feel sorry for the Kingstons being dragged into this. I blame the Windsors, even his in-laws, for this. Shame on all of them, not that they’ll feel it.

  8. Lia says:

    I suspected from the beginning that it was suicide.

    I also didn’t realize what he had already done in his life.
    But what I don’t understand is how he, who actually did good work and something productive, and also has parents who are also did good and whose father, for example, worked partly with Ukraine, can marry someone who has such disgusting parents, exactly the opposite. Must the children not become like that too? the father is involved in disgusting machinations with Russia, the mother is, among other things, a racist.

    • tamsin says:

      @Lia
      Harry and Meghan each have a disgusting father, but it seems they each became more influenced by their mothers.

    • WaterDragon says:

      Love works in mysterious ways. Gabriella seems like a lovely person from everything I’ve read about her. It isn’t her fault that her parents are who and what they are. Too bad that she and Thomas didn’t have any children. I feel for his poor parents. I can’t imagine anything worse than what they went through, finding him like that.

      • Miranda says:

        I’ve seen several people say that Lady Gabriella seems lovely, but what is it about her that makes them think so? I’m not doubting it, it’s just that I was only vaguely aware of her existence and know nothing else about her. It’s sad and rather unfair to her that some of us less-seasoned royal watchers probably only know her name in association with her awful parents, and the first time we’ve been able to put a face with her name is because of her husband’s tragic death.

      • LynnInTX says:

        @WaterDragon Why do you say it’s too bad they didn’t have children? I think it’s a (small) blessing they didn’t. Those hypothetical children would be traumatized by their dad’s death, and probably retraumatized later in life when they understood the circumstances surrounding it. Lady Gabriella would also then be dealing with her own grief, helping navigate very small children through their own confusion and grief and trauma over their Dad suddenly not being around, and having to raise said children on her own.

        Straight talk here, I’ve dealt with severe depression and ideation since I was a tween, 30 years ago now. I very distinctly remember making the decision that I would *never* have children while I was struggling with it, because of the very real odds of what could have happened (I attempted multiple times over the years and came very, very close to dying two of those times), and it seems like a horrible thing to inflict on someone you are supposed to love beyond measure. It’s entirely possible to both be that depressed you have ideation AND be rational enough to understand exactly how bad you are and how it will effect other people.

      • WaterDragon says:

        @LynnInTX, you make valid points, from your experience. I guess I was naively thinking that it would be a comfort to his parents and Ella if they had something tangible left to remember him by. I also do a great deal of genealogy and I am always saddened to see a family line die out.

      • Mtl.Ex.Pat says:

        Why is it too bad they didn’t have children? Perhaps they were happily child free, which is their business…

    • MoxyLady007 says:

      My parents are not a reflection on who I am or what my beliefs are.

      It’s very possible to grow as a person even when raised inside of a toxic cage.

      I do not think it’s fair to paint Ella with the same qualities, beliefs or attributes as her parents – esp her mother.

      Many many people are much more estranged from their families due to a huge disparity in beliefs and ideas on how one should or shouldn’t interact with the world than you would ever realize.

      It sounds as though Mr Kingston and Ella found much to treasure in each other, regardless of upbringing. It also sounds as though he experienced deep trauma and lived through some horrific experiences. I hope that he can now rest peacefully and I hope that those who loved him are able to find comfort in his memory and healing after his tragic loss.

      God what a truly awful thing for his family to experience. I wish them whatever they need in the coming hard years.

    • Rnot says:

      The nanny who raised her did a better job than whoever raised her parents.

    • Sunday says:

      I’m not speaking ill of the dead, but how do you know he did good work? He worked for a huge financial asset management firm giving loans for “developing businesses in the third world.” This does not mean investing in local families who have been harmed by war. This means disaster capitalism, then making billions from rebuilding wartorn countries (if they haven’t actively started the conflict on purpose in the first place).

      This is colonizer language, not the language of a gentle humanitarian who was making the world a better place.

      • Jaded says:

        @Sunday – He was a project manager for a government-sponsored conflict resolution project in Iraq for several years before he went into finance. While there, he worked on hostage negotiations and also worked with Canon Andrew White, the vicar of the only Anglican church in Iraq and someone he was close friends with. He survived many attacks, including a suicide-bombing that killed 22 people. You say you’re not speaking ill of the dead but you are. Let the man rest in peace, he was clearly struggling with depression and possible PTSD.

  9. Eurydice says:

    Seriously, these guys are so desperate to bash Harry that they don’t realize what they’re saying – that even though Kingston lived a modest life under the radar, he still ended up killing himself. So how is that a “life lesson” for Harry?

    • Amy Bee says:

      There’s nothing modest about living in gentrified Notting Hill.

      • Eurydice says:

        Well, that’s not really the point. Whatever kind of life Kingston led, it still ended in suicide. What sort of “life lesson” does the DM think Harry should learn from this?

      • Proud Mary says:

        Good point Eurydice; it’s similar to the Princess Margarette comparison– you know, the one where they use bitter, sad, drunk azz Princess Margarette against Harry. They are so tone death. What’s even more ridiculous about this is that those now making these claims were responsible for driving Harry and Meghan away. They must really think we’re stupid. I can’t recall a single BM news article or opinion column blasting or trolling Ella and her now late husband. Not one. The attempt at re-writing history is proof positive that British journalism is on par with Pravda.

    • Christine says:

      This really bothers me. Harry created Invictus precisely to keep veterans suffering from PTSD from this EXACT fate. It is beyond abusive to suggest there is a life lesson in this tragedy for Harry.

      RIP Thomas Kingston. You deserved more than being another cudgel to beat Harry with.

      • lamejudi says:

        This, 💯

      • Rnot says:

        Harry obviously cares deeply about suicide prevention. Thomas also served his country in Iraq. Thomas has been RF adjacent for years so it’s likely that Harry knows him personally. I imagine this is very painful on both a personal and professional level. One day the BM are going to rue their behavior, may it be soon.

      • Christine says:

        Rnot, I think Harry attended their wedding, alongside QEII, so very likely. I keep thinking the British media can’t possibly stoop lower, and then they do. I guess I’m the fool for thinking they have a rock bottom. This is just horrifying.

    • Amy Bee says:

      @Eurydice: I was just pointing out how ridiculous the article was.

  10. Jan says:

    His poor parents, finding the body.

    • MoxyLady007 says:

      I cannot imagine. They will never recover. It’s just an impossibility. A massive part of them was lost when he was gone. It won’t come back. But other things can grow in its place. Eventually. Maybe.

  11. Amy Bee says:

    What a tone deaf article by Richard Kay. How are you going to use this tragedy to bash Harry when he moved away from the UK in part to protect his and his family’s mental health. Anyway, this is such a sad event and I really feel for his parents.

  12. Boxy Lady says:

    Why are there so many mentions about Tom and his parents being “Christian” in this article???

    • teecee says:

      Yeah that felt sketchy to me also, “protest[ing] too much” vibes.

    • Agnes says:

      And the emphasis on his “modest” lifestyle. Hmmm. Remembered wartime trauma is not the only reason people kill themselves. Whenever bankers commit suicide there’s an automatic audit of the books.

    • Nanea says:

      TK was a member of the Holy Trinity Brompton Church, an evangelical, charismatic church that is fixated on converting people to the Anglican branch of Christianity – proselytizing in the 21st century.

      The HTB is teaching something called Alpha course, modelled on those US megachurches that are meddling in everyday life from birth to burial, including (pre-) marriage counseling, raising kids the *proper* way, not really helping anyone but lining their own coffers.

      • Harper says:

        @Nanea from what I’ve heard of it, Alpha is not a nefarious entity. It’s a program that has even migrated to churches in the US. It is a social/religious program for adults that runs for about 10-11 weeks with small groups and discussion. It is a couple of hours at night, and completely voluntary. Some people get something out of it and some people don’t. The most liberal, socially-conscious, RC church I know of offers it.

      • Miranda says:

        @Harper – I attend an incredibly liberal, socially conscious RC church that offers it, and yeah, your impression of the course is pretty accurate. Its “evangelism” (and there’s really not a whole lot of that; it has more in common with a self-help program) promotes witnessing by living the gospel rather than dictating it in an authoritarian way or forcing/coercing conversions. Not what the term “evangelical” has come to represent for many people today. Many conservative .Christians are actually very critical of it for being too secular-minded.

      • anotherlily says:

        HTB was heavily involved in the ‘Toronto Blessing ‘ phenomena ‘ which is implicated in several scandals. One of those scandals involved the Church of England in what was in many ways an abusive cult based in Sheffield and known as The Nine O’Clock Service. It has taken twenty years from the collapse of this cult for the victims to finally be heard. Legal proceedings are underway.

    • Sunday says:

      He would have had to be Christian to marry into N*zi Princess Michael’s family.

      His entire history is a red flag of disaster capitalism and “mission”-esque work that is just a fancy way of saying that he was a colonizer through and through.

      I do find it very interesting that there have been zero mentions anywhere of Prince Michael’s insanely shady ties to very powerful Russian oligarchs including Putin himself. I thought su*c*de was a huge nono for Christians, seems strange that someone they’re otherwise making seem so devout would even see that as an option for himself. I suppose pushing him out a window would’ve made the connection too obvious.

      • Jaded says:

        You’re painting a very slanted picture of someone you don’t know. Christians can fall prey to depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation just as much as anyone else. I was brought up in the Anglican church and for several years in my twenties was getting therapy because I’d fallen into a terrible depression for a number of reasons. Thankfully I recovered, but I’ll never forget how empty I felt, how worthless and full of self-loathing I was. And your comment “I suppose pushing him out a window would’ve made the connection too obvious” is especially cruel. What connection? Let’s leave him to rest in peace instead of creating fictitious narratives about what a horrible person he was.

      • LynnInTX says:

        @Sunday, whether it’s a “huge nono” depends on the branch/sect. The branch I was raised in considered suicide a tragedy, but not a sin. It acknowledge mental health issues with more than “pray it away” so I guess it was fairly progressive for its time. I know very, very little about the Anglican church’s stance on it as a whole, and even less about his family’s particular branch/sect of Anglicanism.

      • Sunday says:

        @Jaded I’m sorry to hear about your struggles. My comments do not dismiss mental health struggles or finding strength in religion. I’m not being flippant about su*c*dal *deation. Frankly, you’re making a lot of assumptions about what I’ve experienced in my own life, including your other reply to me about ptsd and the military, and you’re very very deeply wrong in this case.

        My comments are based on the indisputable fact that this is a suspicious d*ath simply because of who he was, who his parents are, and the family he married into. You’re ignoring a lot of very blatant red flags because of your personal experiences, which are entirely valid and I am in no way taking away from you, but they simply don’t apply here.

        His father-in-law received a medal from Putin. Literally. That alone qualifies this as something to look into, regardless of what a saint he might have been. The window comments are a specific reference to defenestration, which you’re welcome to research. A quick search will return a slew of results all directly related to Putin, which was my entire point.

        Again, I am truly sorry to cause you distress, but you’re completely misreading my comments and internalizing them instead of considering the plain facts here.

    • Shawna says:

      Christian burial issues? Does that still matter?

  13. Talie says:

    This family is starting to give me Kennedy vibes – you know Meghan reads these headlines and must thank god she got out with her sanity still in-tact.

    • Angie says:

      She doesn’t read the press; n ver has. H has said that at least once if not more often.

  14. Roseberry says:

    How sad for his family and how despicable of the 🐀🐀 to try and obliquely drag the Sussexes into this.
    Londoner here and I can tell you that Notting Hill is one of the most trendy and expensive places to live in London, average price of a flat is £4 million +, so the comparison absolutely falls flat!

  15. Keke Swan says:

    “Lived a modest unfussy life”… and ended up dead, too?

    SMH. Nobody edits this copy for sense, that’s for sure.

    • Cessily says:

      We all know by now that is what they wanted for Meghan, they even ridiculed and denied her suicidal ideation while continuing the hate campaign against her that is still going on 4+ years after she escaped.

    • Shawna says:

      They can’t decide if they’re writing a news story or an obituary.

  16. PC says:

    I would like to remind both Kay and Greenhill that moving away is what saved Meghan’s sanity, life, and probably the Sussex’s marriage. One or all three would not have survived had they remained in England.

    • Agnes says:

      You just gave three good reasons why Royalists did not want the Sussexes to leave. They wanted Meghan psychotic, divorced, and dead. Periodt. And I’ve always been verrrrrrry suspicious of that heater catching fire in Archie’s room on their African tour. It’s still kind of unbelievable, really, that they made it out of Britain alive, with the whole weight of a corrupt institution against them.

      • Juno says:

        I don’t think they would have made it out if there was any hint that they wouldn’t be coming back. It was fully expected that they would return to the fold from their trip to Canada. Charles intentionally put the lives of his child and grandchild in mortal danger to ensure it. Thank god it didn’t work.

  17. Jais says:

    This is sad and it actually makes me angry how so many royal reporters were like here’s this man who died and it has nothing to do with William. Seriously, it was unnecessary and it’s made it into a whole thing.

    • Shawna says:

      It makes sense they would do so if it was William who leaked the death so the public would attribute generous motives to his non-appearance. Including a disclaimer that he wasn’t motivated by Kingston’s death would be someone’s pushback against William’s cruelty in leaking the death to protect himself. For me, this makes more sense to me than interpreting it as a clue that William was involved.

      • Miranda says:

        Your theory is so disgusting and cynical that I think it might be true. Definitely sounds like something William would do. He really does have some sociopathic tendencies.

      • Christine says:

        Word, Miranda. It’s revolting and exactly what William would do. That toad is shameless, and I am getting more angry by the minute.

      • Juno says:

        @Shawna, this is fully what happened.
        I bet some slimy pos in Will’office weaseled, strong-armed, or stole the press announcement of TK’s and hastily changed the date (hence the typo) to get it out there and knock Will’s absence off the front pages.

        Someone pushed back, and then the heightened speculation sparked the scrutiny into Kate’s disappearance.

        I really hope this cruel act of self-preservation was the beginning of Will’s undoing.

  18. julie jules says:

    I suppose this explains William’s absence at King Constantine’s memorial

  19. AA says:

    Oh, this is sad. I also thought he was just some random posh person but it sounds like he had a lot of substance and, obviously, serious mental health issues. I feel so bad for him, his family & his wife. I’ve had suicide in my family and so many people say it’s “such a selfish act.” And it is, but typically they are in such pain they can’t see how it will affect everyone else, so they also deserve compassion. May he RIP.

  20. Shawna says:

    Could be a dig at W&K for all their house-mongering.

  21. Midnight@theOasis says:

    Condolences to Tom’s family. This must be devastating to his wife and parents. And unfortunately the Windsor taint is allowing the BM to use this tragedy for their vendetta against the Sussexes.

  22. Kateee says:

    My heart goes out to everyone struggling under such an impossible burden. Terribly sad.

    I sincerely hope the royals refrain from using him in their lip service to mental health.

  23. ABCD says:

    I keep wondering if they were the blind item royal couple who were about to divorce. They appearantly had put their apartment on the market recently and it would make sense then that he was staying with his parents, as there was no longer a matrimonial home.

    • WiththeAmerican says:

      That makes a lot of sense, and would explain why he did this at his parents’ home, which didn’t make sense as told, ‘after lunch dad walked the dogs and then this happened.’

      So sad, so horrible for his dad especially.

  24. Mary Pester says:

    What a disgusting slime ball Kay is. How dare he treat this family’s tragedy this way. To use it to try and undermine Harry is abhorrent. And equally as sick and disgusting is this rag for printing it.
    I feel so sorry for all of the family. His parents have done some wonderful work, as had he. What a terrible, terrible tragedy, his father is going to be so traumatised by finding him!
    There are many questions to be answered, but the first one should be, WHY HAS KAY STILL GOT A JOB?

    • Jaded says:

      Agree Mary Pester. And there are some on this thread who are just as bad as Kay, painting Kingston as some kind of capitalist monster preying on starving third-world people like a colonialist. Kay needs to shut his pie-hole, it’s vile of him to use Kingston’s death to pummel Harry who has done so much to lift up veterans struggling with physical and mental health issues suffered while serving their country. Clearly Kingston was dealing with depression, maybe PTSD, who knows , but to get the knives out for him after such a tragedy for his wife and family is pretty low.

  25. CL says:

    What a horrible way for his parents to find him. I feel so bad for his family and friends. I hope they can eventually find some peace.

  26. aquarius64 says:

    Why aren’t the BRF wearing black due to the loss of Kingston? This family is no good to married ins. The coroner’s inquest doesn’t say suicide but the circumstances reported wants the reader to come to that conclusion. The BM in its stupidity created a new wave of conspiracy theories by reporting William had nothing to do with Kingston’s death. I read one on X and TikTok that William unalive Kingston because Kate had an affair with Kingston which resulted in a baby (hence the abdominal surgery). William’s neck bruises were the results from a fight says another one.

  27. Amy T says:

    My father died by suicide at 46 (50 years ago this week), and because he was a public figure in the city where we grew up – my sister and I were 14 & 13 at the time – it was big, big news. He didn’t do it at home – he was missing for nearly two months, during which time there was lots of nasty speculation about him having run off, rumors of him having been seen in places far away from where we lived and all kinds of other nastiness. And just when we’d started buying our own groceries again, an off-duty state trooper found his body and the whole circus recommenced. No amount of money, power, or media attention will make this any better for the people forever changed because Thomas Kingston was in the kind of pain that he felt could only be relieved by doing what he did. My heart goes out to the people who loved him.

  28. tamsin says:

    How horribly tragic sad for Kingston’s family and Gabriella. How indecent of the Windsors to make a media circus and to invite speculation, depriving the family of peace and privacy to cope and to mourn. Whatever the true story is, the Windsors and their henchmen are just vile. The news should have been handled with empathy and decency. I can imagine that the former Greek royal family are also not happy with the mess that William has made of the Service of Thanksgiving. I think William, besides being godson to Constantine was god-father to one of his grand-children. No good comes of becoming a Windsor. Poor Diana. Luckily. Harry seems to have escaped his family’s curse. It appears William will be a disaster, and his reign will be one huge continuing mopping up.

  29. Blithe says:

    Good to know that the Daily Mail is so adamantly against finding oneself to be the target of paparazzi. How many pap shots have they paid for this week/month/year/decade? Aren’t paparazzi photographs the foundation of their entire business model?