
A British-born Aussie who believes he’s the lovechild of King Charles III and Queen consort Camilla has said it’s a kick in the face to see William named the Prince of Wales.
Queensland-based engineer Simon Charles Dorante-Day, 56, was adopted at eight months old and claims that his adoptive grandmother told him on her deathbed that he was the secret son of Charles and Camilla.

He has for years spoken of his desire for the royals to submit to a DNA test to confirm his genetic heritage and has even sought senior legal guidance after a letter written to the Queen telling of his predicament was not dignified with a reply.
Mr Dorante-Day told News7 that it was difficult not to take Charles naming William as the Prince of Wales as anything other than a kick in the face.

He said that he didn’t want to feel this way, but that he did, and he believes that the one thing that Charles could do is give him an answer or acknowledge him, and that he gave William a title, and he just wants an answer and a DNA test and that if Charles isn’t his father, then he should prove it.
The Aussie also reaffirmed his commitment to pursuing legal action in an attempt to force the King into a paternity test.

Mr Dorante-Day explained that there’s been a debate in there between a judge and himself and his barrister about the legal standing of Charles and whether the monarch is protected by the law or is above the law.
The answer to that was no, they told him that they didn’t see any reason why he was, and secondly, Camilla and her family were definitely not above the law, so that argument had already been had and settled.
Mr Dorante-Day was born in Portsmouth, UK, on April 5, 1966, and was adopted at eight months old before his family subsequently settled in Australia.
Both of Mr Dorante-Day’s adoptive grandparents had worked for the Queen and Prince Philip in one of their royal households and he claims his adoptive grandmother told him he was the son of Charles and Camilla.
Mr Dorante-Day’s case alleges King Charles and Queen consort Camilla started their intimate relationship in 1965, a year before his birth certificate says he was born, and he claims that Queen consort Camilla was missing from the British social scene and King Charles was sent on a pilgrimage to Australia nine months before he was born.
If this man is proved to be the son of Charles and Camilla, does he actually have a claim to the throne? Children born out of wedlock and adopted children are not eligible to succeed, and the only throne he will sit on is the toilet, but I don’t believe this is the point that he’s making, he just wants to know who he is, and everybody should have that right – he sure does look like them though, and imagine the money he could make from this movie.
However, if this isn’t true his grandmother must have had one wicked sense of humour, but it seems highly improbable that he’s Charles and Camilla’s son because he would have been approximately 17 years old when this man was born, although, of course, there are numerous men that have been parents at 17 years old.
In October 1965 it was suggested that Charles should attend Geelong Grammar School and Timbertop in the foothills of Melbourne, Australia.
Charles was then a shy 17-year-old teenager with no experience of Australia where students learnt to fend for themselves, chop their own wood, cook their own food and live and work in harmony with the natural surroundings.
The Queen wished her son to be treated like any other schoolboy, and that he would remain for one term and decide if he wanted to stay for a second term, but he chose to stay on for six months, so it’s extremely doubtful that this man is the son of Charles and Camilla, and it’s probably correct that his adoptive grandmother played a mean prank on him or she had dementia.