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Murdoch group lawyers say close to deal in Prince Harry lawsuit

Andrew Murphy by Andrew Murphy
January 22, 2025
in Business
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Prince Harry leaves court with his barrister, David Sherborne, after testifying in June that he had suffered lifelong press invasions. ©AFP

London (AFP) – Lawyers for a UK tabloid publisher said Tuesday they were “very close” to settling a hotly-disputed lawsuit brought by Britain’s Prince Harry for alleged unlawful information gathering by two of its newspapers. The case, the culmination of years of legal wrangling during which dozens of other claimants settled, pits King Charles III’s youngest son and a Labour lawmaker against Rupert Murdoch’s News Group Newspapers (NGN). They claim private investigators working for two tabloids owned by NGN — The Sun and the now-shuttered News of the World — repeatedly targeted them unlawfully more than a decade ago.

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Lawyers had been expected to make opening arguments at the blockbuster trial’s start Tuesday at London’s High Court. But they instead asked the exasperated judge, Timothy Fancourt, to delay the proceedings — due to last up to eight weeks — so they could continue last-ditch talks on a settlement. “The solicitors for both sides have been involved in very intense negotiations over the last few days and the reality is we are very close,” NGN’s lawyer Anthony Hudson said. He added that starting the trial could impact the “settlement dynamic,” while “a very substantial sum becomes payable” once the case formally opens, without specifying further details. However, Fancourt refused the joint request, insisting they had had “ample time” to reach an out-of-court deal.

The trial did not get underway, after lawyers for both sides indicated they would take their request to a higher court. Barring that happening, the parties are expected back in court Wednesday morning.

The lawsuit is one of several that Harry, 40, has brought against UK newspaper publishers, with whom he has long had a fractious relationship. He has blamed the paparazzi for the 1997 death of his mother, Princess Diana, in a car chase in Paris. The California-based royal won a phone hacking case against Mirror Group Newspapers just over a year ago. However, the case against NGN does not encompass the prince’s phone hacking allegations, after Fancourt previously ruled he had run out of legal time to pursue that claim. The only other remaining claimant in the case is Tom Watson, a former deputy leader of the Labour party who now sits in the House of Lords.

Both he and Harry claim NGN executives deliberately covered up the allegedly unlawful practices by deleting emails. Watson also claims his phone was hacked between 2009 and 2011, when he was investigating Murdoch’s tabloids as an MP on a watchdog committee. NGN denies the allegations, calling the cover-up claim “wrong” and “unsustainable.” Harry, who quit as a working royal in 2020 and settled in the United States with his wife Meghan, is due to give evidence but was not present Tuesday. The prince, whose formal title is the Duke of Sussex, became the first senior British royal to give evidence in court in a century when he testified against the Mirror Group in 2023. Fancourt, who also presided over that case, ruled in the prince’s favour, concluding that phone hacking had been “widespread and habitual” at Mirror titles in the late 1990s and that the duke’s phone had been tapped to a “modest extent.”

Widespread phone hacking allegations against a number of British tabloids emerged in the late 2000s, prompting the launch of a public inquiry into UK press culture. NGN apologised at the time for unlawful practices at the News of the World and closed it in 2011, while denying similar claims against The Sun and suggestions of a corporate cover-up. It has since settled cases brought by around 1,300 claimants. The publisher has paid out around £1 billion ($1.2 billion) including legal costs, according to British media, and had never seen a case go to trial. That has prompted criticism that England’s civil litigation system favours deep-pocketed defendants who leave claimants with little choice but to settle.

Various high-profile figures who made claims against NGN, including Harry’s brother and heir-to-the-throne Prince William and actor Hugh Grant, have settled in recent years. Grant, a long-time critic of Britain’s tabloids, revealed last year that he had opted against a trial because it could land him with costs approaching £10 million even if he won. Under litigation rules, if a claimant refuses a settlement and a judge awards a lower sum after a trial, the claimant must pay both sides’ legal costs. Harry, whose NGN claim covers a 15-year period from 1996, had shown no sign of wanting to settle before Tuesday. The British royal told a New York Times event last month that his goal was “accountability.”

© 2024 AFP

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