Harry tells UK court press has blood on its hands
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[June 06, 2023]
By Michael Holden and Sam Tobin
LONDON (Reuters) - Prince Harry said the press had blood on its hands as
he gave evidence against a tabloid publisher whose titles he accuses of
phone-hacking and other unlawful activities, becoming the first senior
royal in a witness box in more than a century.
Harry, the fifth-in-line to the throne, briefly smiled as he passed the
phalanx of waiting photographers and camera crews when he arrived at the
modern Rolls Building in central London, ahead of the very rare court
appearance by a royal.
He and more than 100 others are suing Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN), the
publisher of the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday People, over
allegations of widespread wrongdoing between 1991 and 2011.
The younger son of King Charles III entered the witness box to face
hours of cross-examination from Andrew Green, MGN's lawyer, over 33
newspaper articles Harry said were based on information which had been
unlawfully gathered.
Green began by personally apologising to Harry on his client's behalf
over one instance in which it admitted unlawful information gathering.
"It should never have happened and it will not happen again," he said,
adding if the court agreed MGN had committed wrongdoing on other
occasions "you will be entitled to, and you will receive a more
extensive apology".
In questioning, Harry was asked about a passage in his written witness
statement in which he referred to "appalling" behaviour by the British
press. "How much more blood will stain their typing fingers before
someone can put a stop to this madness?" he wrote.
Asked by Green if he was suggesting MGN journalists who wrote the
articles at the centre of his lawsuit had blood on their hands, Harry
replied: "Some of the editors and journalists that are responsible for
causing a lot of pain, upset and in some cases - perhaps inadvertently -
death."
The prince is the first senior British royal to give evidence for 130
years. He was speaking from the same witness box in Court 15 where
singer Ed Sheeran and French actress Eva Green have both recently
appeared in separate and unrelated cases.
The MGN trial began last month, with lawyers for Harry and the other
claimants seeking to prove that unlawful information gathering was
carried out with the knowledge and approval of senior editors and
executives.
Harry is one of four test cases, and his specific allegations form the
focus of the first three days of this week.
However, he did not appear on Monday, having only left the United
States, where he now lives with his American wife Meghan, the previous
evening as it was his daughter Lilibet's birthday on Sunday. The judge,
Timothy Fancourt, said he was surprised at his absence.
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Britain's Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex
walks outside the Rolls Building of the High Court in London,
Britain June 6, 2023. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
MILLIONS OF STORIES
Looking serious and speaking firmly but quietly, Harry said
thousands if not millions of stories had been written about him, as
Green pressed him on whether he had specifically read the MGN
articles in question.
Harry agreed that he and his lawyers had chosen the most intrusive
articles and those which had caused the most distress for his
complaint.
Asked if he remembered reading the first story he had complained
about, an article about his mother visiting him for his 12th
birthday, Harry said: "I was a child, I was at school, these
articles were incredibly invasive. Every time one of these articles
were written it had an effect."
On Monday, Harry's lawyer David Sherborne said his late mother
Princess Diana, had also been a victim of hacking, and the prince
referred to this in his witness statement, laying the blame at the
Daily Mirror's former editor Piers Morgan.
He said the thought of Piers Morgan and his "band of journalists
earwigging" into my mother's messages "makes me feel physically sick
and even more determined to hold those responsible, including Mr
Morgan, accountable for their vile and entirely unjustified
behaviour".
Morgan, now a high-profile broadcaster who works for Rupert
Murdoch's News Corp, has always denied any involvement in, or
knowledge of phone-hacking or other illegal activity. MGN, now owned
by Reach, has previously admitted its titles were involved in
phone-hacking, settling more than 600 claims, but Green has said
there was no evidence that Harry had ever been a victim.
The publisher also argues that some of the personal information
involved had come from senior royal aides, including from one of his
father's former top officials.
(Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Alex Richardson, Kate
Holton and Sharon Singleton)
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