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London High Court set to rule in Prince Harry's Daily Mail privacy lawsuit
Jamaica Inquirer

London High Court set to rule in Prince Harry's Daily Mail privacy lawsuit

2 min read

Britain's High Court is expected to deliver its ruling on Tuesday in a privacy lawsuit filed by Prince Harry and several other well-known public figures. The action targets Associated Newspapers, which owns the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday, over allegations that private information was obtained through improper methods.

Harry, Elton John, and five additional claimants say the publisher invaded their privacy from the early nineteen-nineties through the twenty-tens. The Duke of Sussex testified before the court in January, becoming the first royal to give evidence in a British courtroom in about one hundred and thirty years. He told the bench that Daily Mail coverage had made his wife Meghan's life what he called "an absolute misery".

Associated Newspapers rejected the claims, describing them as "preposterous". The company argued that the roughly fifty articles at the centre of the dispute relied on lawful reporting, with details provided by friends, royal aides, and publicists who spoke voluntarily to journalists.

The financial exposure is considerable for both sides. Legal costs alone could reach tens of millions of pounds, with the losing party expected to cover the other's expenses. A ruling in favour of the claimants could also bring substantial damages.

The case marks Prince Harry's third major legal confrontation with sections of the British press. In January twenty-twenty-five, he settled a claim against newspapers owned by Rupert Murdoch. That publisher paid significant damages and issued an apology for intruding into his personal life over more than a decade. He had earlier won a separate action against Mirror Group Newspapers, publisher of the Daily Mirror, over unlawful information gathering that included phone hacking.

The court's judgment is scheduled to be released at thirteen hundred hours Greenwich Mean Time.

Syndicated from Jamaica Inquirer · originally published .

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