LONDON: London’s police stated they’ll “rigorously contemplate” the findings of a courtroom ruling that discovered Prince Harry had been a sufferer of telephone hacking and different illegal acts by Mirror Group journalists with the data of their editors.
King Charles’ youthful son, who turned the primary senior British royal for 130 years to give proof in courtroom when he appeared at a trial in June, was awarded £140,600 (US$178,000) on Friday after the decide agreed he had been focused by journalists working for Mirror Group Newspapers.
A spokeswoman for London’s police stated that it could “rigorously contemplate” the judgement within the civil case, including: “There isn’t any ongoing investigation.”
Since stepping down from royal duties in 2020 and shifting to California along with his US spouse Meghan, the Duke of Sussex has made it his mission to rid the British press of these he accuses of being “criminals masquerading as journalists”, particularly senior executives and editors.
The courtroom’s ruling stated among the many editors who knew in regards to the “widespread” illegal behaviour was high-profile broadcaster Piers Morgan, the Every day Mirror editor from 1996 to 2004, who has turn out to be a number one critic of Harry and Meghan.
Morgan later angrily denied he was conscious of telephone hacking throughout his time as editor.
