Irish Independent

Actor Grant settles ‘Sun’ hack claim for ‘huge sum’

- VICTORIA WARD

Hugh Grant has settled his claim against News Group Newspapers, the publisher of The Sun, over allegation­s of unlawful informatio­n-gathering, admitting that he could not risk being saddled with an estimated £10m (€11.7m) in legal costs.

The actor, along with Prince Harry and more than 40 others, had sued NGN over alleged unlawful informatio­n-gathering and invasion of privacy. A trial is scheduled for January 2025.

Grant (63) claimed that he was targeted by journalist­s and private investigat­ors working for The Sun, “including burglaries to order, the breaking and entering of private property in order to obtain private informatio­n through bugging, landline tapping, phone hacking”.

However, he said yesterday he had been forced to settle his claim because the rules of civil litigation meant that if he was awarded damages “even a penny less” than the settlement offer, he would be liable for the legal costs of both sides.

“As is common with entirely innocent people, they are offering me an enormous sum of money to keep this matter out of court,” he wrote in a lengthy explanatio­n of his actions on X.

“I don’t want to accept this money or settle. I would love to see all the allegation­s that they deny tested in court… Rupert Murdoch’s lawyers are very expensive. So even if every allegation is proven in court, I would still be liable for something approachin­g £10m in costs. I’m afraid I am shying at that fence.”

The Love Actually star has been the public face of the Hacked Off campaign against the tabloid newspaper industry since it launched at the height of the phone-hacking scandal in 2011.

In 2012, he became director of a notfor-profit company set up by the campaign for press reform and also played a leading role at the Leveson Inquiry into press standards.

Grant had alleged that there was a break-in at his London flat, where the front door was forced off its hinges, and that a story appeared shortly afterwards in The Sun that “detailed the interior”.

Despite accepting the settlement, Grant said the money “has a stink”, adding he refused to let it be “hush money”. As such, he is to donate it to groups such as Hacked Off “to expose the worst excesses of our oligarch-owned press”.

Harry could also be forced to settle his legal claim against The Sun’s publisher over alleged unlawful informatio­n-gathering because of the risk of high legal costs, the High Court has been told.

The estranged royal (39) alleges he was targeted by journalist­s and private investigat­ors working for NGN.

David Sherborne, representi­ng Harry and others, told a judge in London that “the Duke of Sussex is subject to the same issues that Sienna Miller and Hugh Grant have been subject to, which is that the offers are made that make it impossible for them to go ahead”.

In December 2021, Ms Miller settled her case over allegation­s of voicemail intercepti­on and misuse of private informatio­n against NGN for “substantia­l damages”, with the publisher making no admission of liability. (© Telegraph Media Group Ltd 2024)

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