Scottish Daily Mail

Hugh Grant phone-hack claim slung out by judge

- By Sam Greenhill Chief Reporter

HUGH Grant has been refused permission to sue The Sun newspaper for allegedly hacking his phone.

The actor, a key supporter of anti-tabloid press campaign group Hacked Off, had launched a legal action, claiming Sun journalist­s accessed voice messages on his mobile phone.

But a High Court judge ruled yesterday that Grant’s claim was launched too long after he became aware of potentiall­y unlawful hacking activity and could not be considered.

Mr Justice Fancourt did allow the 62-year-old actor to continue with legal claims against The Sun over other allegation­s of ‘unlawful informatio­n gathering’. Grant claims the paper’s journalist­s hired private investigat­ors to seek informatio­n about him through activities including ‘landline tapping, bugging, blagging’, and says three burglaries were committed in an illegal search for stories.

News Group Newspapers (NGN), which owns The Sun, denies the claims.

NGN has settled several claims since the phone-hacking scandal broke in relation to the News of the World, which closed in 2011, but has consistent­ly denied that any unlawful informatio­n gathering took place at The Sun. One of the NGN settlement­s over the News of the World was with Grant.

Also at the High Court yesterday, Fawlty Towers star John Cleese turned up at Prince Harry’s hacking case against the publishers of the Daily Mirror.

Cleese, 83, arrived at the court in London with Graham Johnson, a convicted phone hacker.

The actor, who is not involved in the case, smiled to photograph­ers as he walked into the building saying: ‘Hello, hello, hello.’

He watched proceeding­s from the public gallery as Harry’s barrister David Sherborne tried to convince the judge to let him introduce three late witnesses.

Mr Justice Fancourt rejected the applicatio­n, saying it would not be ‘in the interest of fairness of the trial as a whole’.

Monty Python star Cleese is a vehement opponent of the tabloid Press, once threatenin­g to leave Britain partly because of his ‘beef’ with newspapers.

He has been meeting Prince Harry’s witnesses, including Mr Johnson, a former journalist who was given a suspended sentence for hacking phones and is now working with Harry’s lawyers. The Mirror denies the claims against it.

‘Landline tapping and bugging’

 ?? ?? Support: John Cleese yesterday
Support: John Cleese yesterday

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