
"If you complain, they [the press] double down on you, in my experience, he said. My social circles were not leaky, I want to make that absolutely clear, he said, adding that the moment he became suspicious about someone, he had to cut them off. When you are in a situation like this, the moment something private is out, your circle of trust and knowledge decreases over time, he said."
"Prince Harry has insisted he did not have a leaky social circle that gave stories about him to journalists at the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday, as he told the high court the publisher of the titles had an obsession with surveilling him. Giving evidence in the high court against Associated Newspapers Led (ANL), the Duke of Sussex rejected the publisher's claims that its journalists had secured information about him from his friends and acquaintances, rather than through unlawful means."
Prince Harry insists he did not have a leaky social circle and rejects claims that journalists obtained information from friends, alleging unlawful surveillance by Associated Newspapers. He states some stories could not be challenged while he was within the royal institution because complaints led the press to double down. He describes cutting off people he became suspicious of and says private disclosures reduced his circle of trust over time. He joins six other high-profile claimants accusing the publisher of unlawful techniques, alleging voicemail hacking, landline and hardwire tapping, blagging, obtaining itemised phone bills, and tracking private flight information for Chelsy Davy.
Read at www.theguardian.com
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]