A tip-off and 'more luck than judgement': The story behind Andrew car snap
14 hours ago Rumeana JahangirNorth West The image of a stunned Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor slumped back in a car after his arrest has been splashed over newspapers and websites worldwide.
When news broke on Thursday morning that the King's brother had been detained by police, Noble drove six hours south from his Manchester home to Norfolk where the former prince resides. He usually captures pictures for an array of stories and had been covering floods and football fixtures earlier this week.
"Is it the best photo I've ever taken?
No. Is it up there with most important? 100%. "
He was then taken to a Norfolk police station for questioning on what was his 66th birthday.
Following a tip-off, Noble headed to the police station in the historic market town of Aylsham, more than an hour's drive from Andrew's home.
"I'm based in the north of England, it's as far away from Norfolk as could possibly be.
It's four and half, five hours in a car with no traffic. "
Some other members of the media were also waiting outside but not much was going on, Noble said.
After six hours of waiting in the cold and night falling, it seemed like the tip-off was wrong. Noble packed up and started heading down the road towards a hotel for an overnight stay.
Noble raced back, just in time to see the two vehicles leaving at high speed. The front car contained two police officers so Noble aimed his camera and flash at the car behind.
Noble said he was tired after a long day, but had to focus.
"You've got to try and guess where he's sitting, is he in the front, is he in the back?
"It's hit and miss, you have to use flash. I had done some test shots to get a rough idea. "
He took six pictures - two showed police, two were blank and one was out of focus.
The unprecedented nature of the event – plus the clear focus on Andrew's face – secured frontpage coverage worldwide.
"When you're doing car shots, it's more luck than judgement. "
He said it was "surreal" to see his photo becoming the defining image of a major news story.
"In a climate where photographers are everywhere, it's rare for one outlet to get one key moment like that. "
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: