Prince Harry, Elton John appear at London High Court in privacy lawsuit against Daily Mail

0
213

Britain’s Prince Harry and singer Elton John made a surprise appearance at London’s High Court on Monday as they and five others began a lawsuit against the publisher of the Daily Mail paper over years of alleged phone-tapping and privacy breaches.

Prince Harry

Harry, the younger son of King Charles, has brought a lawsuit against Associated Newspapers (ANL), along with John – one of the biggest selling artists of all time – his husband David Furnish, and actors Elizabeth Hurley and Sadie Frost.

The prince, who flew in from his California home, sat just feet away from a large group of reporters, watching intently and occasionally taking notes. His spokesperson said he had wanted to be there to show his support, and that he might attend for much of the four-day preliminary hearing.

Elton John and Furnish arrived during a break for lunch, while Frost was also in court on Monday. None of the claimants are expected to speak during the hearing.

Elton John

They allege they were victims of “numerous unlawful acts” carried out by ANL titles the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday, their lawyers said in extracts of submissions made to the court.

These included hacking mobile phone messages, bugging calls, getting private information such as medical records by deception or “blagging” – using private investigators to unlawfully obtain information, and “even commissioning the breaking and entry into private property”, according to the extracts.

The alleged activity ran from 1993 to 2011, [in some cases?] “even continuing beyond until 2018”, the lawyers said.

In Harry’s written case, quoted by ANL’s lawyers in court filings, he says that the publication of articles about him caused “suspicion and paranoia … Friends were lost or cut off as a result and everyone became a ‘suspect'”.

The filings also cited a letter sent by the prince’s lawyers before he filed his lawsuit which said “the repeated, wrongful disclosures … had a serious and profound effect upon (him) at the time of their publication”.

Harry had “painful memories … regarding the extent to which ANL publicised private and sensitive information relating to his private and family life”, it said.

Another claimant is Doreen Lawrence, mother of Black teenager Stephen Lawrence who was murdered in a 1993 racist attack and whose killers the Mail had championed bringing to justice.