Whisky Bottles Given as Gifts by the Queen Classified as a Matter of National Security
Every year, Queen Elizabeth II awards miniature bottles of whisky to the guards at her estate in Sandringham. And we'd be telling you more about them – what kind, how much they're worth, how many she hands out annually – if not for a blanket classification issued on the subject by local police. That's right, the bottles of scotch handed out by the Queen are considered a matter of national security.According to Norfolk police, if they divulged how many bottles were distributed, it would give away how many guards are stationed there. And if Al-Qaeda found out, it would make it easier for them to kidnap members of the royal family. That might seem like an extreme measure of paranoia, but not in the context of break-ins at royal residences in recent history. Aside from terrorism, one man infiltrated Buckingham Palace in 1982, the Queen awaking to find him sitting on her bed. Ten ears later a man was arrested on the premises twice, while another intruder broke into St. James Palace and had himself a scotch. Two years later, a drunken man knocked on Princess Anne's door to ask for directions to the railway station. The embarrassing intrusions have left local police on high alert to prevent further incidents, hence the refusal to disclose details of the whisky distribution. And there you have it.
[Source: The Daily Mail]
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
yokoluvr1 Aug 10th 2009 5:49PM
Who does the proof reading around here? Isn't is spelled whiskey? And Ten Years later.
Valerie Aug 10th 2009 8:20PM
They don't have proof readers at Luxist.I have been reading this site for more than a year and this is an everyday almost every story type of thing.I've just given up on my comments on it.
stronglikecask Aug 11th 2009 2:07AM
Actually, "whisky" is scotch whisky, from Scotland.
Whiskey is rye, bourbon, etc.