UK

Harry accused of wasting court’s time – as Diana’s letters to Michael Barrymore read out

Mirror journalists listened into voicemail messages from Princess Diana while Piers Morgan was editor of the newspaper, Prince Harry’s lawyer has claimed at the High Court.

Harry is attempting to prove that, for two decades, stories published by Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) in the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday People were written about him using information that was illegally obtained through phone hacking and voicemail interception, blagging, and the use of private investigators.

The Duke of Sussex did not attend the opening of the hearing in London on Monday despite being in the country – much to the “surprise” of the judge, who had directed witnesses to be in court a day prior to giving evidence. Harry is due to appear in the witness box on Tuesday, and his absence was described as “extraordinary” by MGN’s lawyer Andrew Green, who accused his legal team of wasting the court’s time.

David Sherbourne, acting for the duke, 38, said he had been celebrating his daughter Lilibet’s second birthday and flown from LA to the UK after that.

The barrister told the court in his opening statement that Harry had “no time in his life when he was safe” from unlawful information-gathering.

His statement included allegations that Princess Diana’s phone was also hacked, and he gave details of letters she wrote to comedian Michael Barrymore that revealed she had secret meetings with the star.

Mr Sherborne said that at the time, Barrymore was “struggling with coming out as gay” as well as an addiction to drink and drugs, and that Diana was meeting to comfort him through a difficult time.

In one letter, dated March 1997, she wrote: “Dear Michael, what joy it was to finally meet you tonight. I did want to emphasise that I’m here for you, whatever, whenever. It’s very easy to pop round and see you.”

In a later letter, she said she was “devastated” to hear the Mirror was telephoning her office to ask about “six meetings supposedly between us”.

“Nobody knew about our conversations/phone call. How deeply sorry I am [that] what I considered to be a private matter has become public property,” she wrote.

Mr Sherborne argued that “plainly the Daily Mirror has been listening in to the voicemail messages” between the pair.

He said that in former Mirror editor Piers Morgan’s book, The Insider, he refers to “rumours” that Diana was “secretly comforting” Barrymore and that he was being treated for alcohol addiction.

The lawyer argues the only way the Mirror could have found this out was through intercepting voicemails.

Mirror Group has said it used documents, public statements and sources to legally report on the prince.

In his opening statement, Mr Green described the allegations about Diana as “total speculation” and “without any evidential basis whatsoever”.

Media lawyer Jonathan Coad, who was in court alongside Sky News staff, said the Princess Diana claims were “a bit of a bombshell”.

He told Sky News: “The first allegations concerning both Princess Diana and Piers Morgan have arrived at the same time.

Read more:
Prince Harry has score to settle in High Court appearance
Prince Harry loses court battle with Home Office

“The allegation is that while Piers Morgan was the editor of the Mirror, Michael Barrymore and Princess Diana exchanged letters.

“She writes to Michael Barrymore. And in a second letter, she says, I’m so sorry, our secret meeting has been discovered.

“What David Sherborne is saying is that in the first letter, Princess Diana explained they’ll be speaking on the phone. And here’s my phone number.

“David Sherborne says that what’s obviously happened is that Barrymore left a message. They hacked it and they discovered about this secret meeting.”

The hearing continues.

Harry In Court – Watch special programme on Sky News tonight at 9

Articles You May Like

Wall Street giants hire lawyers in Thames Water debt battle
Elon Musk Tapped to Lead New ‘DOGE’ Department—Despite the Government Already Having One for Efficiency
UN climate summits ‘no longer fit for purpose’, warn leading figures
Oil giant Shell wins appeal against landmark Dutch climate ruling to slash emissions
How Ukrainian anti-aircraft units are downing Russian drones