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Amber O'Connor & Katie Williams

Prince William and Prince Harry's former nanny gets surprising new job

Prince William and Prince Harry's former nanny has landed herself an unusual job - knitting wooly socks.

The nanny, Alexandra Pettifer, better known as Tiggy Legge-Bourke, is making cosy socks to be auctioned off for charity in a bid to raise funds for research to help stop salmon disappearing from Scotland's rivers.

As the Mirror reports, her handmade socks will be auctioned off by one of King Charles' key charities, Atlantic Salmon Trust. This comes after the trust wrote to river owners across the UK and Ireland asking for donations for its online auction before the closing date on November 17.

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Advertising the lot on its website, the Trust said: "The surprise and runaway success from last year's auction is back! Made especially for you, the AST's very own Tiggy Pettifer will knit you a bespoke pair of his and hers wading socks - this year with an added beanie hat! A most coveted item, get your bids in fast as in previous years these socks sold for over £1,000 for one pair alone!"

To date, the highest bid stands at £500 and among the prizes will be bespoke knitwear, created by Alexandra, who is herself an advanced fly fishing instructor.

This comes after the former nanny to the royals was given an apology at the High Court over unfounded allegations that she had an affair with Prince Charles and had an abortion.

Her solicitor said the false claims had caused "serious personal consequences", after a probe has already found Panorama's Martin Bashir used fake documents to win Diana's trust.

The BBC interview, described by commentators at the time as a 'bombshell', was viewed by 22.8m in the UK and broadcasted three years after Prince Charles and Diana separated.

Tiggy Legge-Bourke was the royal nanny to young Prince William and Prince Harry, (1994 UK Press)

It was thought to have destroyed the image of a "contented, caring and united" Royal Family. The BBC said that it was "extremely sorry for the serious and prolonged harm" caused to Mrs Pettifer and her family following the broadcast.

In an agreed statement read out in court, Mrs Pettifer's solicitor Louise Prince said the claims had included "the very serious and totally unfounded allegations that the claimant was having an affair with HRH Prince of Wales, resulting in a pregnancy which was aborted. These allegations were fabricated."

She added that Mrs Pettifer had not known the source of the claims over the last 25 years, but it was "likely that these false and malicious allegations arose as a result and in the context of BBC Panorama's efforts to procure an exclusive interview with Diana, Princess of Wales".

Ms Prince said the former nanny was "relieved that the BBC accepts that the allegations are completely untrue and without any foundation whatsoever".

As part of the statement, the BBC said it fully accepted the claims against Mrs Pettifer "were wholly baseless, should never have been made, and that the BBC did not, at the time, adequately investigate serious concerns" over how it had secured the Panorama interview.

It said that had it done so earlier, it could have corrected the false statements and "this may well have diminished the harm" caused to Mrs Pettifer and her family over the years. The corporation also agreed to pay Mrs Pettifer a substantial, undisclosed sum and her legal costs.

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