Prince Harry and Elton John are going to court in a high-profile fight against the Daily Mail
A side-by-side image of Prince Harry and Elton John
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Another
high-octane case against a media outlet is getting underway — this one, across
the pond in the UK.
Both Prince
Harry and Elton John were in court on Monday as proceedings commenced in an
explosive lawsuit brought against Daily Mail publisher, Associated Newspapers.
The lawsuit,
which was filed last year, alleges that Associated Newspapers was responsible
for “abhorrent criminal activity and gross breaches of privacy” in its efforts
to obtain dirt on celebrities. Allegations in the lawsuit include the placing
of listening devices in victims’ homes and cars, bugging phone calls, and
paying police for information.
Actresses
Sadie Frost and Elizabeth Hurley, filmmaker David Furnish, and Doreen Lawrence,
whose son was killed in a racist attack in 1997, are among the half-dozen
high-profile figures joining together in the legal action.
The suit is
just one of three that the Duke of Sussex has brought against major UK
newspaper publishers, including Rupert Murdoch’s News Group Newspapers and
Mirror Group Newspapers.
To
be clear, Associated Newspapers has strongly denied the claims against it. When
the lawsuit was filed, the publisher called the claims “preposterous smears”
and it said it “utterly and unambiguously refuted” them.
Now it will
be up to a judge from London’s High Court to determine whether the case will
advance, or be thrown out as Associated Papers has motioned for.
Monday was
the first in four days of pre-trial hearings, which are expected to conclude on
Thursday, in which the judge will hear arguments ahead of rendering a decision.
The presence
of Prince Harry and Elton John, which was done entirely on their own volition
and not legally required, fueled media coverage on Monday, turning the press’
eye on the preliminary hearing. Their appearances were the top stories on a
number of UK news websites. Even the Daily Mail published an article on their arrival in court.
A
spokesperson for Prince Harry told Reuters that the Duke of Sussex wanted to be present
to signal public support for the case. In other words, he attended to shine a
spotlight on the case.
It’s no
surprise that Prince Harry would use his celebrity to gin up attention about
the lawsuit. He has spent years critiquing tabloid media and talked openly
about the negative effects some of the coverage has had on his family.
As the
barrister in the case said Monday, Harry “regards Associated’s unlawful acts to
amount to a major betrayal given promises made by the media to improve its
conduct following the tragic and untimely death of his mother, Princess Diana,
in 1997.”
The
allegations in the legal action are all eerily reminiscent of the behavior that
was exposed in the News of the World scandal, which ultimately resulted in
Murdoch shuttering the popular newspaper and the UK launching a probe into
press ethics.
It’s unclear
whether this case will result in such profound consequence. But if it does go
to trial, it is safe to say that it will be precisely the type of trial that an
outlet like the Daily Mail relishes in covering.


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