Prince Harry’s court case against the publisher of The British Daily Mail will go to trial. Prince Harry and six other celebrities are seeking legal action.
These include Baroness Lawrence Clarendon, Sir Elton John, Sadie Frost, David Furnish, Sir Simon Hughes, and Elizabeth Hurley, who have accused the newspaper publisher of unlawful information gathering. The case is against Associated Newspapers Limited newspaper group.
Newspaper Groups May Have Gone Too Far
The judge presiding over the case decided in favor of Prince Harry. The claims include illegally acquiring data by placing listening devices in cars and homes, taping phone calls, and using false representation to procure medical and financial records.
The Duke of Sussex said the publisher pestered him and those close to him. He did this by illicitly hacking into voicemails, bugging landlines, hiring private investigators to snoop, and stealing confidential information. According to Harry, the publisher also stole the air flight information of his ex-girlfriend, Chelsy Davy.
The Daily Mail publisher vehemently denies these claims. The people who made the allegations also claim that the serious privacy breaches go back to 1993.
Judge Matthew Nicklin said in his ruling,
“I consider that each claimant has a real prospect of demonstrating concealment by Associated that was not and could not have been discovered by the relevant claimant before 2016.”
The judge also explained in his ruling,
“In my judgment, the Court must recognize, and give effect to, the significant public interest in ensuring that a restriction order made under the Inquiries Act 2005 is observed and not breached.”
This finding means that an individual or organization can seek to prevent private information from leaking and apply for a “restriction order,” which will prevent the disclosure or publication of such information.
Associated Newspapers Denies These “Preposterous” Claims
Hamlins, the legal team working for the plaintiffs, accuses ANL of committing several illegal activities to gain a story.
Associated Newspapers responded to these “preposterous” accusations by saying,
“As we have always made unequivocally clear, the lurid claims made by Prince Harry and others of phone hacking, landline tapping, burglary, and sticky-window microphones are simply preposterous, and we look forward to establishing this in court in due course.”
Apparently, a private investigator identified as Gavin Burrows confessed to hacking phones and planting listening devices in cars. However, Burrows later denied saying any of this, so figuring out the real story is complicated.
The judge found secret payments made by various newspapers to private investigators within the ledgers Harry and the other plaintiffs’ legal team provided. However, the information could not be used at this time without the newspapers and government permission.
This is not the first case of unlawful information-gathering Prince Harry has been involved with. Harry successfully sued ANL for libel in 2020 when someone in their newspaper group wrote an article. The article claimed that he snubbed the Royal Marines. ANL apologized to the Duke and paid for damages. Harry also has a suit against Rupert Murdoch’s News Group Newspapers.
Also, this past June, he made another in-person court appearance for a separate phone hacking case against Mirror Group newspapers. It was the first time a royal family member was cross-examined in court since the 19th century.
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