Vancouver Sun

More dirt on Harry?

U. S. women tell public relations guru they have photos, video of time spent in prince’s hotel room

- BY RAPHAEL SATTER Associated Press writer Cassandra Vinograd contribute­d to this report.

A prominent British public relations guru said Friday he’d been approached by two women who claim to have more material on Prince Harry.

LONDON — Brace yourself, Harry.

A prominent British public relations guru said Friday he’d been approached by two women who claimed to have more material on Prince Harry, raising the possibilit­y that the world may soon be seeing more compromisi­ng images of the British royal.

Earlier this week, celebrity gossip website TMZ published photos of Harry romping in the nude during a party at his Las Vegas hotel suite. Many Britons have laughed off the 27- yearold prince’s hijinks, but questions have been raised about his publicly funded security detail.

In a telephone interview, publicist Max Clifford said he had been called by two American women who claim they were in the prince’s hotel room in the U. S. last week. Clifford, a savvy operator famous for negotiatin­g kiss- and- tell interviews, said the women “said they had lots of interestin­g things: pictures, video, that kind of thing.”

He said he turned them down.

“I couldn’t justify this,” he said. “It’s an infringeme­nt of his privacy. That’s why I said no.”

On Thursday, TMZ claimed that “several girls” had taken pictures at the party using their cellphones as the party got started and that “more photos were taken” after the clothes came off. Neither TMZ nor Clifford has made clear whether they believe the unreleased photograph­s show the prince in the nude.

British publicatio­ns have largely steered clear of the photograph­s, with the prominent exception of Rupert Murdoch’s Sun tabloid, which became the first paper to splash the pictures across its front page on Friday with the words: “HEIR IT IS!” and marketing the grainy photograph as a “souvenir printed edition.”

Britain’s Press Complaints Commission said it has received more than 850 complaints about the naked pictures in the tabloid, mostly from members of the public.

Nearly all of the complaints are about invasion of privacy and will be investigat­ed, the commission added.

The paper said it had defied the wishes of the Royal Family because there was a public interest in knowing what the prince, who represente­d the Queen at the 2012 Olympic Games and is heavily involved in charity work, got up to while abroad.

Privacy lawyer Chris Hutchings said the paper’s public interest argument could have traction.

“The public interest argument is on the basis that Prince Harry represents this country around the world and the photos bring into question his suitabilit­y to act as a British ambassador,” Hutchings said, although he added: “The Sun have taken a calculated risk in publishing the photos given their inherently private nature.”

As of Friday, the palace hasn’t made any official complaint.

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 ?? TOBY MELVILLE/ REUTERS ?? The U. K.’ s Sun tabloid is the only British newspaper that has run the nude Prince Harry photos.
TOBY MELVILLE/ REUTERS The U. K.’ s Sun tabloid is the only British newspaper that has run the nude Prince Harry photos.

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