The Daily Telegraph

Duke is fighting on five fronts but, even if he wins, this may well backfire

Prince Harry’s multiple court cases can surely only further stoke the flames of his family feuds

- Camilla Tominey ASSOCIATE EDITOR

His witness statement last month contained incendiary claims, including that the royal family struck a ‘secret deal’ on phonehacki­ng

Some may question his wisdom in publicly airing more dirty linen when it only generates more headlines for the newspapers he is suing

It is perhaps no wonder the Duke of Sussex spent so little time at the Coronation when you consider just how many people he is simultaneo­usly suing right now.

Litigation costs time and money, and while Prince Harry may have more of both on his hands after stepping down as a “working” royal and moving to America in 2020, his life now appears to be dominated by legal action.

Yesterday, the Duke’s lawyers were back in the High Court, this time arguing it was wrong for the Home Office to deny him the right to pay privately for his Metropolit­an Police bodyguards when he is back in the UK. Having already launched a claim challengin­g the decision to no longer give him the “same degree” of personal protective security that he had when he was a fully fledged member of the monarchy, the Duke, 38, is now trying to bring a second lawsuit against the Home Office for denying him the right to reimburse the taxpayer.

The case is one of five that the father of two is pursuing through the civil court in London.

While his lawyers were arguing the toss with the Home Office in one court, David Sherborne, the Duke’s barrister, appeared in another, continuing to lead his case against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN), publishers of the Daily and Sunday Mirror and Sunday People for unlawful informatio­n gathering, including phone hacking.

It came after Omid Scobie, author of Finding Freedom, a hagiograph­y of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, told a trial on Monday that he was asked to hack phones while doing work experience at the Sunday People, which is owned by MGN.

Last Wednesday, on the first day of what is expected to be a sevenweek trial, Harry’s written witness statement was submitted to court. He blamed MGN for the end of his relationsh­ip with Chelsy Davy and claimed the King, Princess Diana and the Prince and Princess of Wales were targeted by private investigat­ors who were paid a total of more than £10million by the newspaper group.

In a written submission, MGN said it “unreserved­ly apologises” for one instance of unlawful informatio­n gathering against Harry and said that the legal challenge brought by the Duke “warrants compensati­on”. Yet, he appears determined to have his day in court, and is due to appear in person in June.

Meanwhile, the Duke is also suing News Group Newspapers, publishers of The Sun and The Sun on Sunday, for unlawful informatio­n gathering. Last month, he submitted a 31-page witness statement containing a series of incendiary claims including the suggestion that a “secret agreement” was struck between the royal household and Rupert Murdoch’s empire over phone hacking in order to “smooth the way” for Camilla to become Queen Consort.

He also revealed that his brother, Prince William, had secretly received a large compensati­on payout from the company in 2020, thought to be about £1 million.

The Duke is also suing Associated Newspapers Ltd, publishers of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday, on two fronts – for illegal informatio­n gathering and for publishing what he claims was a libellous story about his case against the Home Office in February 2022.

All five cases are ongoing and it is not known when they will conclude or what the outcome will be. Yet, having readily divulged even more personal informatio­n in his ongoing quest to protect his privacy, even if he wins in court, Harry may end up losing.

Contrary to suggestion­s his lawyers are operating on a “no win, no fee basis”, the Duke is already wracking up a considerab­le legal bill – and may not recoup all of his costs, even if he wins.

His wife, Meghan, only had

90 per cent of her estimated £1million costs covered when she won her claim against the Mail on Sunday for a breach of privacy and copyright in January 2022.

If the Duke has spent five times that amount on five separate claims, then he still potentiall­y faces losing about £500,000, even if he wins all five.

Like the Duchess, Harry will argue the legal action is more about principles than money – but then he risks inviting criticism that he can only afford to engage in what some may regard as a self-indulgent war against the press because he is a multi-millionair­e with nothing better to do than avenge himself on his critics.

Some may also question the wisdom of Harry airing yet more dirty linen in public when it only seems to serve to generate more headlines for the very newspapers he is suing.

A win against the Home Office may guarantee the Duke gets armed bodyguards when he next visits the UK, but it may seem a pyrrhic victory when the chances of him receiving a warm welcome from the royals appear to be diminishin­g with every court revelation.

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