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‘Every thought was tracked – I was made paranoid,’ Prince Harry tells court

Other claims against the Daily Mail publisher include obtaining Sadie Frost’s medical records and targeting Doreen Lawrence

Prince Harry arrives at the High Court ahead of the Daily Mail legal battle

Prince Harry was left feeling “paranoid beyond belief” after the publisher of the Daily Mail tracked his “every move, thought or feeling”, a major court case against the company has been told.

The Duke of Sussex said that methods allegedly employed by Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL) – including obtaining flight details and monitoring the phone conversations of his ex-girlfriend Chelsy Davy – had placed a “massive strain” on his personal relationships and created “distrust and suspicion”.

King Charles’s younger son is joined by Sir Elton John and the singer’s husband David Furnish, campaigner and Labour peer Doreen Lawrence, politician Sir Simon Hughes, and actors Sadie Frost and Liz Hurley in accusing ANL of the “clear systematic and sustained use of unlawful information-gathering”.

Their lawyers claim that employees of the company, which publishes the Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday, listened to phone calls and voice messages and also obtained medical records by deception between 1993 and 2018.

This included one journalist writing a draft story about Ms Frost’s ectopic pregnancy that “not even her sisters or mother knew about”, after allegedly accessing her medical information, the court heard.

ANL emphatically denies all claims of unlawful practices. It says celebrities had “leaky social circles” and that disclosures to the press about the private life of the Duke of Sussex in particular were “a not uncommon occurrence”.

Lawyer David Sherborne accused the Mail’s publisher of ‘systematic and sustained use of unlawful information-gathering’
Lawyer David Sherborne accused the Mail’s publisher of ‘systematic and sustained use of unlawful information-gathering’ (Reuters)

In written submissions, Harry said: “I find it deeply troubling that Associated used phrases such as ‘sources’, ‘friends’ and the like as a device to hide unlawful information gathering.”

The High Court heard that the alleged unlawful information-gathering in the duke’s case is related to 14 articles between 2001 and 2013. Harry, who has flown back to Britain from his new home in California for the case, is expected to take the witness stand on Thursday.

His barrister, David Sherborne, told the court: “The Duke of Sussex has been caused great distress by each and every episode of unlawful information-gathering against him by Associated or on its behalf, and the fruits of that unlawful information-gathering in the 14 unlawful articles of which he complains.”

He added: “It is evident from the articles and the evidence of the Duke of Sussex that the targeting of him has had a profoundly distressing effect, with episodes of pleaded unlawful information-gathering described as ‘disturbing to feel that my every move, thought or feeling was being tracked and monitored just for the Mail to make money out of it’, ‘intrusion (that) was terrifying’ for loved ones, creating a ‘massive strain’ on personal relationships while invidiously ‘creating distrust and suspicion’, and ‘driving me paranoid beyond belief, isolating me’.”

Antony White KC, for ANL, said the duke had discussed his private life in the media, while information about his life was also provided by Buckingham Palace spokespeople.

Opening the case, Mr Sherborne told the court that the Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday had been engaged in unlawful information-gathering over “at least two decades”.

He added: “There is evidence, indisputable evidence, in the documents, that Associated journalists and senior executives were commissioning and approving the acquisition and use of unlawfully obtained information, and they must have known that.

“That is why we say this was no clean ship – far from it.”

Elizabeth Hurley and her son Damian Hurley arriving at the Royal Courts of Justice on Monday
Elizabeth Hurley and her son Damian Hurley arriving at the Royal Courts of Justice on Monday (PA)

Mr Sherborne said ANL had taken a “clear and unequivocal” position at the 2011 Leveson Inquiry, which followed the closure of the News of the World tabloid, and had denied any unlawful acts.

Mr Sherborne said: “They emphatically denied that there had been any unlawful activities at all. In short, they swore that they were a clean ship.”

But he continued: “Associated knew that these emphatic denials were not true. They knew they had skeletons in their closet.”

The claimants allege in their written submissions that the publisher had a “culture of unlawful information gathering that wrecked the lives of so many”.

Unlawful activities said to have occurred include hiring private investigators to place listening devices inside cars, “blagging” private records, and accessing private phone conversations. This is said to have included illegally intercepting voicemail messages, listening to live landline calls, and obtaining medical records.

Mail on Sunday journalist Katie Nicholl allegedly accessed Ms Frost’s medical information after Ms Frost underwent an operation at a private hospital for an unplanned ectopic pregnancy with her then boyfriend Jackson Scott, during the period of her divorce from actor Jude Law.

Actor Sadie Frost is among those taking legal action against the Daily Mail publisher
Actor Sadie Frost is among those taking legal action against the Daily Mail publisher (Reuters)

Despite only Ms Frost’s “closest friends” being aware of the pregnancy, these details were recorded by Ms Nicholl in the draft article. The barrister said: “How did they know she was treated unless they had access to her voicemail or medical records?”

Baroness Lawrence was allegedly the subject of five “unlawful” articles between 1997 and 2007 as a result of being “extensively” targeted by ANL and private investigators.

In court documents, she said she felt “bitterly let down” by the Daily Mail, and “angry” that she had been made to fight in court for three years after her son was murdered in a racist attack in 1993.

“I am a victim all over again, but by people who I thought were my allies and friends,” she said. “I am being made to fight, when all I have ever wanted is to be told the plain truth and for justice to be done, and an apology.”

Meanwhile, Sir Elton and his husband Mr Furnish said they felt that their home and the safety of their children had been “violated”, and that they were “horrified” that ANL had allegedly “used their friendships against them”.

“Both Sir Elton and Mr Furnish underline the outrage they feel in light of Associated’s invasion into medical details surrounding the birth of their son Zachary, and the stealing of their son’s birth certificate ‘before we even had a chance to see it ourselves’.”

The Duke of Sussex has previously brought claims of unlawful information-gathering against other newspapers
The Duke of Sussex has previously brought claims of unlawful information-gathering against other newspapers (Reuters)

ANL lawyer Mr White told the court in written submissions: “In relation to almost every article alleged to be the product of phone-hacking or phone-tapping, Associated is able to call a witness or witnesses to explain how the article was in fact sourced.

“The claimants’ inferential case of phone-hacking and phone-tapping is met and convincingly rebutted. The pattern of misconduct the claimants seek to establish is simply not made out.”

The high-profile claimants began their action against ANL in 2022. In 2023, ANL failed in a bid to have the cases thrown out for being “time-barred” or brought too late.

Harry has previously brought legal action against other newspaper publishers over allegations of unlawful information-gathering. He was awarded £140,600 in damages by a judge from Mirror Group Newspapers in 2023, and settled a claim against News Group Newspapers, the publisher of The Sun and the now-defunct News of the World, last January.

The trial, which is expected to last nine weeks, continues.

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