Former mistress of King Juan Carlos says €65MILLION he gave her was 'a generous gift' and 'recognition of how much I meant to him' (despite him asking for the money back two years later)
- Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein said Juan Carlos gifted her €65 million in 2012
- Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein said the king tried to win her back two years later
- But when she spurned him he 'went ballistic' and demanded his money back
- The millions are now the subject of Swiss inquiry into alleged money laundering
- Juan Carlos left Spain at the beginning of this month and is staying in the UAE
King Juan Carlos's former mistress has claimed that €65 million he gave her was 'a generous gift and a recognition of how much I meant to him.'
In a rare interview, Corinna Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein told the BBC how the monarch tried to win her back two years after giving her the money and 'went ballistic' when she spurned him and demanded his millions back.
Juan Carlos, 82, a notorious Lothario who has been married to Queen Sofia since 1962, carried out an affair with the Danish-born businesswoman from 2004 to 2009.
In 2012, their romance was sensationally discovered when he fractured his hip and had to be rushed back home from an elephant hunting trip in Botswana where Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein - still a close friend - had accompanied him.
Two years later, Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein claims that as a result of his guilt for the 'intense pressure' she came under and as an expression of his love, he gifted her €65 million. That colossal transfer of funds is now the subject of a Swiss inquiry.
The former king, who abdicated in 2014, is under investigation by Spain's supreme court over corruption allegations which centre on a $100million payment by the late king of Saudi Arabia.
At the start of this month, Juan Carlos announced he was leaving Spain and it has recently emerged that he is staying in Abu Dhabi.

Spanish King Juan Carlos greets Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein at the Laureus World Sports Awards in Barcelona on 22 May 2006. Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein says their affair began in 2004 and ended in 2009
Remembering their ill-fated hunting holiday to Botswana eight years ago, Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein told the BBC: 'I wasn't keen on going on this trip ... I felt that King Juan Carlos was trying to get me to come back to him, and I didn't want to give a false impression. I almost had premonitions about this trip.'
She concludes that the media circus which followed was masterminded by the royal establishment, who wanted to 'speed up an abdication' and have her out of the picture.
'From the moment I came back from that trip I was under full-blown surveillance,' Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein told the BBC. 'This was the beginning of a campaign to paint me as this Wallis Simpson, Lady Macbeth, evil character who'd led this wonderful man astray on this trip during a big economic crisis.'

Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein attends the Women4Walkabout Ladies Luncheon at Claridge's, London in June, 2017
She alleges that the Centro Internacional de Inteligencia (CNI), Spanish intelligence, began harassing her.
First, she claims, her Monaco apartment was ransacked and then on a business trip to Brazil she was tailed.
An anonymous threat was made about there being 'many tunnels between Monaco and Nice' - a reference to Princess Diana's fatal car crash.
Furthermore, she claimed a book about the British royal's death was left out in the living room of her Swiss apartment.
Later that year, Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein said she was visited by the CNI.
The operative, a dear friend of Juan Carlos, told her 'he was sent by the king' to warn her against talking to the media.
'He said if I didn't follow these instructions, he would not guarantee my physical safety or the physical safety of my children.' She told the broadcaster.
It was after learning of this turmoil that Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein claims the king gifted her the €65 million in 2012.
She told the BBC that she'd been 'very surprised' to receive the funds but flew to Madrid to thank the king, who she believes felt guilty about how her flat in Monaco had been ransacked and the visit by the CNI.
'I think he was very shocked to understand the extent of pressure I'd been put under, and the extent of the reputational destruction that had taken place.' She said.
In testimony provided to a Swiss prosecutor, Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein said that the colossal transfer was an act of love.
'I think it was recognition of how much I meant to him, how much [her son] meant to him,' she says. 'It was a gratitude for looking after him during his absolutely worst moments.'
She is insistent that Juan Carlos was not laundering the money or trying to hide it when he gifted it to her.
But despite the generosity, Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein claims that two years later, in 2014, the king demanded his money back.
She described how he 'made desperate attempt to get me to come back to him' and that when she rejected him he 'went ballistic' and asked her to return every cent.
But Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein believes this was 'just a tantrum' because she told the BBC that Juan Carlos told Swiss authorities he'd never asked her for the funds back.

Juan Carlos and Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein at Castle Schockingen in Stuttgart, Germany, in February 2006

The ex-king and his wife Sofia (pictured) have reportedly not shared a bedroom since she caught him with another woman on a 1976 hunting trip

Prince Charles, Prince of Wales greets Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein (centre) and Bob Colacello at a fund raising event he held for The Prince's Drawing school at Buckingham Palace on June 19, 2014 in London
Inauspiciously, it was on a hunt that the pair had first met in February 2004.
Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein described how during the shoot Juan Carlos got into difficulty with his shotgun.
'And I'm quite knowledgeable about all that, so I could explain what was wrong,' she told the BBC. 'I think he was quite surprised.'
Their relationship blossomed, Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein - who was at the time running a consultancy firm in London - would meet the king in a small cottage on his estate in Madrid.
She told the broadcaster that they 'immediately clicked' with many common interests and in the first year, Juan Carlos would call her up ten times a day.
She once asked how all this would sit with the queen and Juan Carlos explained that he and Sofia 'had an arrangement to represent the crown, but they led totally different, separate lives.'
The king and Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein grew extremely close, she spent time with his friends and met his children.
And in 2009, Juan Carlos even visited her father - telling him that 'he was very much in love with me, and intended to marry me.'
Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein claims that the monarch had proposed to her earlier that year.
She told the BBC: 'I was very much in love with him, but I foresaw - I'm a political strategist - that this would be very difficult. And I thought it might destabilise the monarchy.'
Her father had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and been given just months to live.
'So I decided to spend time with him - we were very close,' Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein said. 'To my great shock, just after his funeral, the king told me he'd been carrying on a relationship with another woman for a period of three years.'

Corinna zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, Richard E. Grant and Maria Cristina Buccellati attend The Old Vic Bicentenary Ball to celebrate the theatre's 200th birthday at The Old Vic Theatre on May 13, 2018 in London
The pair remained close friends, however, and Juan Carlos even called her to his bedside in 2010 before undergoing surgery for a benign tumour on his lung which he was 'terrified' about.
When the king's family arrived at the hospital, Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein recalls being unceremoniously told to leave by courtiers.
In 2014, Juan Carlos abdicated and his son Felipe took over the throne.
It is through the monarch's dealings in the Middle East that Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein has once again found herself in the spotlight.

Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein attends the Fashion 4 Development's 5th annual Official First Ladies luncheon at The Pierre Hotel on September 28, 2015 in New York
She is under investigation in relation to audio recordings said to be of a meeting between herself and retired Spanish police commissioner José Manuel Villarejo at her London home in 2015.
During the meeting she alleged that the former king had received a secret commission for helping to secure a $7 billion Saudi rail deal.
The investigation into the conversation was initially closed in 2018, but it was reopened last month after new evidence emerged with police discovering other copies of the conversation, The Times reported.
Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein is being investigated over whether she commissioned Villarejo, then a serving officer, to obtain information about a Spanish citizen.
A lawyer for Ms Sayn-Wittgenstein said: 'Corinna never hired or discussed hiring Villarejo and therefore never paid him for anything ... Our client will robustly defend her rights against these baseless accusations.'
Meanwhile a Swiss inquiry is probing Ms Zu Sayn-Wittgenstein for alleged money laundering over the €65 million payment Juan Carlos made to her in 2012.
Swiss prosecutor, Yves Bertossa, is looking at an alleged $100 million donation to Juan Carlos - €65 million at the time - from the late Saudi king in 2008.
Earlier this month Juan Carlos, 82, made the stunning announcement he was leaving Spain and after two weeks of rampant speculation, the palace confirmed that the emeritus king was in the UAE.
The former monarch is reportedly staying in the £10,000-a-night presidential suite of the Emirates Palace Hotel in Abu Dhabi with his 'most faithful friend for the past 40 years', 70-year-old Mallorcan interior designer Marta Gaya.