Daily Mail

Harry hacking trial witness ‘in threat to destroy private detective’

- By Sam Greenhill Chief Reporter

A CONVICTED phone hacker – whose evidence is helping Prince Harry to sue newspapers – threatened to ‘destroy’ a private investigat­or unless he came ‘on side’, a court heard yesterday.

Paul Hawkes said he was warned by former journalist Dan Evans that if he did not ‘play ball’, he and his firm would be ruined by anti-Press group Hacked Off.

The Duke of Sussex is suing the publisher of The Mirror, alleging phone hacking and other unlawful informatio­n gathering, which it denies.

One of Harry’s witnesses is Mr Evans, who gave evidence in the case last week. Mr Evans was given a tenmonth suspended prison sentence in 2014 for hacking phones but became a ‘poacher-turned-gamekeeper’, the court was told. Mr Hawkes, giving evidence about how his PI firm Research Associates had provided ‘completely legal investigat­ive services’ to The Mirror, helping to trace people, said that in 2016 he was approached by Mr Evans ‘ on behalf of Hacked Off’, the campaign group founded by, among others, actor Hugh Grant.

In a statement to the High Court, he said: ‘Mr Evans suggested I had been involved in computer hacking Hugh Grant, which I had not... Mr Evans proceeded to try and threaten me. He talked to me about getting me “on side”, arguing that it was in my best interests. I remember telling him that I had no idea about the case he was talking about.

‘When it became clear that I could not help him, Mr Evans told me that if I was not willing to play ball, then they would destroy me [and] Research Associates through costly litigation. I understood “they” to mean Hacked Off and their lawyers.’

Mr Hawkes added: ‘He also said words to the effect that there had been a bit of a lull in the phone hacking litigation and that Hacked Off, or their lawyers, were using this time and the funds they were sitting on to find other investigat­ors. He made it very clear that me and my company could be financiall­y ruined by the lawyers.’

Mr Hawkes repeatedly stressed that everything he and his firm of private investigat­ors did was based on ‘open source’ informatio­n and within the law.

In a statement, Mr Evans said: ‘I seriously doubt in the context of any conversati­on I would make any threat to “destroy” anyone.’

He said Mr Hawkes’ descriptio­n of their meeting was ‘not my recollecti­on of events’ and denied he had been there on behalf of Hacked Off. Mr Evans said he had told the investigat­or ‘of the extreme stress and expense involved’ in being a defendant in a legal case, but that he had meant this as ‘empathy’ towards Mr Hawkes. He offered him an apology if this had been interprete­d in any other way.

The case continues.

‘My company could be ruined’

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 ?? ?? Warning: PI Paul Hawkes, left, and Dan Evans
Warning: PI Paul Hawkes, left, and Dan Evans
 ?? ?? Suing: Prince Harry
Suing: Prince Harry

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