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Buckingham Palace allegedly ‘withheld’ information of past phone hacking for ‘long time’: Prince Harry claims

Prince Harry
(Getty)

The Duke of Sussex claims the royal family withheld information about phone hacking from him because they did not want him to file a claim because it would “open a can of worms.”

In a witness statement filed in support of his civil claim against Daily Mail publisher Associated Newspapers, Prince Harry stated that he was raised to embrace his family’s code of “never complain, never explain” when interacting with the press.

“The institution made it clear that we did not need to know anything about phone hacking and it was made clear to me that the royal family did not sit in the witness box because that could open up a can of worms,” the Duke said in his statement.

But discussing phone hacking claims against News Group Newspapers, Harry said “I became aware that I had a claim that I could bring” in 2018.

He added: “The institution was without a doubt withholding information from me for a long time about NGN’s phone hacking and that has only become clear in recent years as I have pursued my own claim with different legal advice and representation.”

Outlining how he found out other people within or associated with the royal family had brought phone hacking claims against the press, he says: “It is not an exaggeration to say that the bubble burst in terms of what I knew in 2020 when I moved out of the United Kingdom.”

He went on: “There was never any centralized discussion between us about who had brought claims as each office in the institution is siloed. “There is this misconception that we are all in constant communication with one another but that is not true.”

(Getty)

Doreen Lawrence also provided a witness statement where she said she was “played by a fool” by the Daily Mail and believed the publication was “on my son’s side and cared about the fight to bring his killers to justice”.

Lady Lawrence claimed “covert electronic surveillance” was used on her when she met people at a cafe she would attend when she wanted to speak to people privately. She also claimed corrupt payments had been made to police officers.

“We had always suspected that the police had been involved in corruption because of everything that happened that seemed to make sure Stephen’s killers were not found and put in jail,” Lady Lawrence said.

She added: “I am haunted by the fact that I will never know the truth of what happened to Stephen the night he was killed, or of the failed police investigations into his murder, and now the illegal invasions and spying and stealing of information about his death and about me by The Mail.”

The statement by actress Elizabeth Hurley, who is also a claimant in the Associated News lawsuit, detailed how the claimed phone hacking took place.

She claimed that private investigators working for Associated News had a “former military and British Telecom phone man on the payroll full-time”.

“This man would use cassette recorders and insert them into the landline cables of the green BT junction box cabinets on the street. Sometimes he also put them in manholes,” Ms. Hurley said.

“The cassette recorders were always hidden and carefully and deliberately concealed to evade any sweeps ordered by suspicious victims.

“Hugh [Grant] and I, and many others, were victims of this and I thought about the time I had asked BT to sweep my lines and they had confirmed everything was fine and I had thought my phone was safe and secure to talk.”

She added that recordings of her conversations were sold for £2,000 in cash “hidden in an envelope”.

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