Irish Daily Mail

Meghan wants judge to rule in her favour without trial

Plea in ‘privacy’ battle over dad’s letter

- Irish Daily Mail Reporter news@dailymail.ie

MEGHAN Markle yesterday asked a British high court judge to rule in her favour in her privacy claim against a newspaper.

Lawyers for Ms Markle, 39, said her legal action should be decided by high court judge Mr Justice Warby, without proceeding to full trial.

Ms Markle is suing the publisher of The Mail on Sunday, the sister paper of the Daily Mail, after it published extracts from a letter she wrote to her father after her marriage to Prince Harry. Her lawyers say the letter was ‘intrinsica­lly private, personal and sensitive’ and was never intended to be made public.

Justin Rushbrooke QC, for Ms Markle, said the publicatio­n of extracts from the letter was a ‘triple-barrelled’ assault on her ‘private life, her family life and her correspond­ence’.

He said the letter had outlined Ms Markle’s ‘constant love’ for her father Thomas Markle, 76, and her fears for his health.

The letter, written in August 2018, is at the centre of the high-stakes privacy case at the high court in London. Lawyers for The Mail on Sunday deny breaches of privacy, copyright and data protection and have asked that the case continue to trial later this year.

They argued that Ms Markle expected the letter to become public, and effectivel­y breached her own privacy by allowing her friends to speak to a US magazine on her behalf.

Mr Rushbrooke said both Ms Markle and her husband had attempted to guard their privacy following fears about Mr Markle speaking to journalist­s.

They were in regular contact with Mr Markle in the run-up to their 2018 wedding, he said, and had been worried about him. Ms Markle offered to help protect her father against intrusive paparazzi photograph­ers, the court heard.

Ms Markle’s letter to her father was written after her wedding, and lawyers for the newspaper said it was vital that she should face questions over alleged ‘inconsiste­ncies’ in her account of how she came to write it.

She has always insisted she wrote the ‘deeply painful’ letter herself and said she informed Jason Knauf, Kensington Palace’s director of communicat­ions, about her letter and showed him a draft.

Lawyers for the newspaper argue she consulted Mr Knauf because she expected the letter to become public. They are seeking further informatio­n from him and three other senior royal aides over the letter. The quartet were named in legal documents seen by the court as Mr Knauf, Samantha Cohen, Christian Jones and Sara Latham.

At the time the letter was written, shortly after Ms Markle’s marriage to Harry, Ms Cohen was their private secretary and the other three worked in the palace communicat­ions office. Lawyers for Ms Markle said a legal firm representi­ng the quartet had confirmed that ‘one or more of our clients would be in a position to shed some light on the following issues: the creation of the letter and the electronic draft’. All four said they were willing to give evidence but did not wish to ‘take sides’, the court heard.

A new witness statement from The Mail on Sunday editor Ted Verity claimed Mr Knauf worked on drafts of the letter with Ms Markle. He said a source had told him that Sara Latham had helped the authors of a controvers­ial biography of Meghan and Harry, Finding Freedom.

Mr Verity said Ms Latham had effectivel­y been ‘fact-checking’ for the authors. Antony White QC, for the newspaper, said it should be able to question Ms Markle about ‘inconsiste­ncies’ in her case. It would only be able to do so if the case went to full trial. He added: ‘There are now on the record a number of inconsiste­nt statements... that she will need to explain.’

The hearing continues.

‘A number of inconsiste­ncies’

 ??  ?? Court battle: Meghan Markle and Prince Harry
Court battle: Meghan Markle and Prince Harry
 ??  ?? Meghan with her father Thomas Markle
Meghan with her father Thomas Markle

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