Tag: The Sun

  • Prince Harry prepares for showdown with The Sun publisher in court

    Prince Harry prepares for showdown with The Sun publisher in court

    The Duke of Sussex, Prince Harry, is taking legal action against News Group Newspapers (NGN), the publisher of The Sun, over allegations of using illegal methods to gather information about him.

    A judge has ruled that parts of Prince Harry’s claim can proceed, and the case may go to trial in the High Court next year. However, the judge dismissed his phone-hacking claims.

    Prince Harry has accused journalists and private investigators working for The Sun and the now-defunct News of the World of employing unlawful methods to obtain information about him.

    The ongoing legal battle revolves around the timing of when Prince Harry knew enough about the alleged methods used against him to bring the claim within the legal time limit.

    NGN’s lawyers argue that Prince Harry waited too long to file the claim and should therefore have it dismissed.

    However, Prince Harry previously revealed a “secret agreement” between Buckingham Palace and NGN that allegedly prevented him from taking legal action earlier.

    He claimed that this agreement stipulated any privacy actions against the company should be delayed and then settled out of court, which is why he did not file the claim earlier.

    Lawyers for NGN have previously disputed the existence of any secret agreement, describing it as “Alice in Wonderland stuff”.

    Mr Justice Fancourt said Harry’s amended case submitted earlier this year – which was reliant on the existence of the “secret agreement” – did not “reach the necessary threshold of plausibility and cogency”.

    He said emails between the Palace and NGN suggested there was “at some time an understanding” that the Royal Family’s claims “would be addressed informally” at a late date, but the “vague and limited” evidence provided by Harry’s lawyers did not amount to proof of Harry’s specific claims.

    From 2012, the judge ruled, Harry was “on notice” that he may have been hacked after finding out about the practice at the News of the World.

    The judge said Harry “could easily” have had his lawyers investigate further, at which point a “much fuller picture would have emerged”. The judge said the phone-hacking claim was therefore too late.

    A spokesperson for NGN called the ruling a “significant victory” for the company.

    They said: “The judge, Mr Justice Fancourt, found his claims in relation to the alleged ‘secret agreement’ were not plausible or credible.

    Hugh Grant arriving at court
    Image caption,Hugh Grant is also taking legal action against NGN

    “It is quite clear there was never any such agreement and it is only the Duke who has ever asserted there was.”

    But the judge ruled that there should be a trial around other alleged methods used to get information about Harry, identified in the ruling as “blagging of confidential information from third parties, and instructing private investigators to do these or other unlawful acts”.

    The judge said Harry had a “realistically arguable” case that he did not know enough about any use of the methods back in September 2013, the point at which NGN argue that his six-year window to bring a claim began.

    Harry says he did not have enough information to bring a claim until 2018.

    Thursday’s ruling does not take a position on whether Harry waited too long to bring a valid claim, only that “it is not sufficiently clear at this stage that it was issued too late” and should be decided at trial.

    The trial could feature “many other” claimants, including actor Hugh Grant, and is due to start in January 2024, although could run into 2025.

    Harry’s legal action against the Sun is one of three major claims he is making against the publishers of British tabloids.

    He gave unprecedented testimony in court last month as part of his claim against the Mirror Group, and is also attempting to sue the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday over alleged breaches of privacy.

  • ITV boss: Clarkson’s Meghan comments ‘awful’ but host will remain

    ITV’s head of media and entertainment has called Jeremy Clarkson‘s remarks about the Duchess of Sussex in a column for the Sun “awful.”

    As the host of the game show Who Wants To Be A Millionaire, Kevin Lygo stated that there were “at the moment” no plans to replace him.

    He claimed that Mr. Clarkson’s remarks did not reflect the principles of ITV.

    After writing on Friday that he “hated [Meghan] on a cellular level,” Clarkson received more than 20,000 complaints to the press regulator.

    The column has now been removed from the Sun’s website, at Clarkson’s request, and replaced with a tweet in which he says he is “horrified” after “causing so much hurt”.

    In his message to followers, posted on Monday, he described a reference he made to a scene in Game of Thrones as “clumsy”.

    Speaking at a Broadcasting Press Guild event in London on Tuesday, Mr Lygo said he had “no control” over what Mr Clarkson wrote in his newspaper columns.

    “We hire him as a consummate broadcaster of the most famous quiz on television, Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?” he said.

    “So it’s not quite in our wheelhouse but I don’t know what he was thinking when he wrote that. It was awful.”

    Calls for apology

    Conservative MP Caroline Nokes has written to Sun editor Victoria Newton calling for action to be taken against Mr Clarkson, and for an “unreserved apology” to be issued to the duchess.

    The letter has been signed by more than 60 MPs.

    The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter

    SNP MP John Nicolson, who sits on the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, has written to chief executive of ITV Dame Carolyn McCall asking for Mr Clarkson to be removed as a host of the quiz show.

    Mr Nicolson said he had also written to Amazon, which broadcasts Clarkson’s Farm and The Grand Tour, where the presenter appears alongside James May and Richard Hammond.

    In a call to Shelagh Fogarty’s Monday show on LBC, the mother of late television presenter Caroline Flack condemned the comments.

    Responding to Mr Clarkson saying he would like to see the duchess humiliated, Christine Flack said it had “upset her so much that Jeremy Clarkson was not only allowed to think that but to put it in print”.

    Caroline Flack’s death in February 2020 was ruled a suicide by the coroner.

    An inquest in August 2020 heard “her trauma was played out in the national press” and that was “incredibly distressing for her.”

    Writing in his original column, Clarkson said: “At night, I’m unable to sleep as I lie there, grinding my teeth and dreaming of the day when she [Meghan] is made to parade naked through the streets of every town in Britain while the crowds chant ‘Shame!’ and throw lumps of excrement at her.

    “Everyone who’s my age thinks the same way,” he added. “But what makes me despair is that younger people, especially girls, think she’s pretty cool. They think she was a prisoner of Buckingham Palace, forced to talk about nothing but embroidery and kittens.”

    His column followed the release of the last three episodes of Netflix’s docuseries Harry & Meghan on Thursday.