|accessdate=9 July 2010}}</ref> In 2004, he married Leila C. Jenkins; he filed for divorce a year later. In 2010 Jenkins was ordered to pay $1.9 million "money earned through deceit" and $5.7 million in civil penalties in connection with activities of her investment firm, Locke Capital Management Inc.<ref name=money>"Newport Money Manager Fined" ''Providence Journal'', 23 July 2010. [http://www.projo.com/news/content/LOCKE_CAPITAL_RULING_07-23-10_8EJ9UPD_v13.3dd1d51.html]</ref>
|accessdate=9 July 2010}}</ref> In 2004, he married Leila C. Jenkins; he filed for divorce a year later. In 2010 Jenkins was ordered to pay $1.9 million "money earned through deceit" and $5.7 million in civil penalties in connection with activities of her investment firm, Locke Capital Management Inc.<ref name=money>"Newport Money Manager Fined" ''Providence Journal'', 23 July 2010. [http://www.projo.com/news/content/LOCKE_CAPITAL_RULING_07-23-10_8EJ9UPD_v13.3dd1d51.html]</ref> Jenkins is now being accused of trying to get a second passport under the name Leila C. Sinclair using a phony Social Security number and birth certificate, months after the SEC launched its probe in New York City on Nov. 17 She already had a passport in the name of Leila Jenkins. <ref>Rhode Island News "Passport probe adds to woes of R.I. investor" July 24, 2010 [http://www.projo.com/news/content/JENKINS_PASSPORT_07-24-10_ETJAA50_v19.3b3d8be.html]</ref>
With the passage of the [[House of Lords Act 1999]], Lord Caithness, along with most other hereditary peers, lost his automatic right to sit in the House of Lords. He was however elected as one of the 90 representative peers to remain in the House of Lords under the provisions of the Act.
With the passage of the [[House of Lords Act 1999]], Lord Caithness, along with most other hereditary peers, lost his automatic right to sit in the House of Lords. He was however elected as one of the 90 representative peers to remain in the House of Lords under the provisions of the Act.
In 1990, Lord Caithness was again shuffled to the Foreign Office as a Minister of State, and then in 1992 back to the Department of Transport. He married Diana Caroline Coke (1953–1994) in 1975. In January 1994, Lord Caithness resigned from the Government following the suicide of his wife, Diana Countess of Caithness, who according to the BBC "shot herself in despair at his relationship with another woman."[1] In 2004, he married Leila C. Jenkins; he filed for divorce a year later. In 2010 Jenkins was ordered to pay $1.9 million "money earned through deceit" and $5.7 million in civil penalties in connection with activities of her investment firm, Locke Capital Management Inc.[2] Jenkins is now being accused of trying to get a second passport under the name Leila C. Sinclair using a phony Social Security number and birth certificate, months after the SEC launched its probe in New York City on Nov. 17 She already had a passport in the name of Leila Jenkins. [3]
With the passage of the House of Lords Act 1999, Lord Caithness, along with most other hereditary peers, lost his automatic right to sit in the House of Lords. He was however elected as one of the 90 representative peers to remain in the House of Lords under the provisions of the Act.