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Charles III and Camilla are in danger: the royal guard is on high alert because of the monarchs' "son"

King Charles and Queen Camilla are under special protection because of a "illegitimate son"

The British royal security services are on high alert and closely guarding Charles and Camilla, who are currently on a working visit to Australia. The danger comes from a 58-year-old man who claims to be the monarchs' secret child.

British-born Simon Charles Dorante-Day is convinced that he is the illegitimate son of the King and Queen, who was given up for adoption shortly after birth and taken in by palace staff. He has been demanding a DNA test for years to prove his case, but now he has been put on a security watch list after being warned that the man could act decisively, the Daily Mail reports.

When Charles and Camilla's tour was announced, Dorante-Day hinted at a plan to "get back at" the royal couple once they arrive in Sydney on the evening of October 25. "What am I going to do this time?" Simon said in May of this year, "Well, I would be a very stupid person not to take action when he (Charles – Ed.) is in the same jurisdiction as me. But I think it would be even more foolish to reveal my plans prematurely."

Now, close protection experts have confirmed that the Australian will be under close surveillance by royal bodyguards while the King and Queen are in the country. "There are probably about 20 names on that list already," said a security insider, "and certainly anyone who makes a fuss in public is going to be of increased interest.

As you know, Simon Charles Dorante-Day was adopted when he was about eight months old in August 1966 in Portsmouth on the south coast of England, when Camilla was about to turn 18 and Charles was 17. The father of nine claims that his adopted grandmother, who worked for the Queen, helped organize his new life as an exile. Now he wants the truth to come out so that he can take William's place as heir to the British throne and become the new Prince of Wales.

Dorante-Day believes that inconsistencies in his official birth certificate and in his name prove that he has royal blood. In particular, he was convinced by his adoptive parents that he came from a family of monarchs.

Nevertheless, the chronology of events contradicts the official story of the royal couple's romance, which claims that Charles met Camilla many years after the birth of an "illegitimate child." Simon believes that the future king and queen first became close in 1965, meeting at Winston Churchill's funeral in January of that year.

However, widely held information says that Charles and Camilla met at a polo match at Windsor Great Park in 1970. The couple eventually got married in 2005.

For years, the Australian has been urging members of the royal family to take a DNA test. Simon was sure that the test would prove his suspicions. He even wrote a letter to Elizabeth II but never received a response.

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