Charles Stopford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
Charles Albert Stopford III

May 1962 (age 6364)
Orlando, Florida
Othernames
  • Christopher Edward Buckingham
  • Hans Peter Schmidt
  • Alexi Romanov
OccupationIT security consultant
KnownforLiving under an assumed identity for over twenty years
Charles Stopford
Born
Charles Albert Stopford III

May 1962 (age 6364)
Orlando, Florida
Other names
  • Christopher Edward Buckingham
  • Hans Peter Schmidt
  • Alexi Romanov
OccupationIT security consultant
Known forLiving under an assumed identity for over twenty years
Spouse
Jody Hussey
(m. 1984; div. 1997)
Children2
Parent(s)Charles and Barbara Stopford
Criminal chargePassport fraud
Penalty22 months in prison, reduced to 9 months on appeal

Charles Albert Stopford III (born May 1962)[1] is an American imposter who posed as the Earl of Buckingham and lived under the assumed name of Christopher Buckingham for over twenty years. The press dubbed him ‘the real Jackal’ due to his use of a method described in the novel The Day of the Jackal to assume the identity of a deceased infant.[2]

Charles Stopford, the eldest of nine children, was born in Orlando, Florida, to Charles and Barbara Stopford.[3] He is of English ancestry.[4] Family members described him as being fascinated with British culture and adept at mimicking an English accent.[5]

After graduating high school in 1980, Stopford enlisted in the US Navy. Upon being discharged, he found employment at Walt Disney World in the United Kingdom Pavilion at Epcot, where he would speak with an English accent while entertaining visitors.[1]

Stopford left the United States following a conviction for possessing explosives. He was initially sentenced to probation but was jailed for 60 days for a probation violation. He fled the country in 1983 after being released from jail.[6]

Christopher Buckingham

In 1983 Stopford assumed the identity of Christopher Edward Buckingham, an infant who died eight months after birth. Using information obtained from London's archive of births, deaths and marriages, Stopford was able to procure a National Insurance number, a National Health Card and a passport under Buckingham's name.[7]

As Buckingham, Stopford affected an upper-class British accent.[7] He claimed to be the son of diplomats who died in a plane crash in Egypt in 1982.[8] He also claimed to have attended Harrow School and Cambridge University, and to be the owner of a manor house.[9] Beginning in 1997, he adopted the title 'Earl of Buckingham',[6] a peerage that has been extinct since 1687,[10] and claimed to have a seat in the House of Lords.[4] He had stationery which bore the moniker 'Lord Buckingham' and a Buckingham coat of arms which had last been held in the early 1700s.[11]

He met Jody Hussey, a 19 year old Canadian student, while in West Germany in 1984.[7] They married on December 7, 1984, at Watford Registry Office.[12] They had two children, Lindsey and Edward, before divorcing in 1997.[13]

Stopford lived in both England and Germany, where he rented an apartment in Hohentengen.[10] He was working as an information technology security consultant in Switzerland at the time of his arrest.[5]

Stopford is also known to have used the names Hans Peter Schmidt and Alexi Romanov.[1]

Arrest and identification

In media

References

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