“On that, I share Prince Harry’s opinion. I just wish he’d stop doing it,” Morgan told reporters outside his London home.
Fancourt concluded in December there had been widespread hacking and unlawful activities at MGN from 1996 until 2011.
Prince Harry at the NFL Honours award show ahead of Super Bowl 58 in Las Vegas.Credit: AP
Sherborne said MGN was likely to pay more than £2 million to cover the claimants’ legal costs for their generic case, and an interim payment of £400,000 towards the prince’s individual costs.
MGN, now owned by Reach, said it was pleased to have reached an agreement with Harry.
“Where historical wrongdoing took place, we apologise unreservedly, have taken full responsibility and paid compensation,” an MGN spokesperson said.
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Since stepping down from royal duties in March 2020 and moving to California with his American wife Meghan, the prince has made it his mission to rid the British press of the senior executives and editors he accuses of abusing their power to spread lies and unlawfully intrude into people’s lives.
The Mirror case is his biggest victory so far in that cause, and he has further, similar lawsuits pending against Associated Newspapers, the publisher of the Daily Mail, and News Corp’s British newspaper arm, News Group Newspapers.
“As I said back in December, our mission continues,” his statement said. “It is the very reason why I started this, and why I will continue to see it through to the end.”
He again called for the authorities to take action and berated the high-profile broadcaster Piers Morgan, a former Daily Mirror editor, who Fancourt concluded was among the editors who had known about the “widespread” unlawful behaviour.
Morgan, now one of the most prominent and vocal critics of Harry and Meghan, gave a statement after the December judgement saying he had never hacked a phone nor told anybody else to do so. Harry’s mission was not to reform the press but to destroy the monarchy, Morgan said.
Prince Harry’s barrister, David Sherborne (right) speaking to the media outside of the Rolls Building in central London.Credit: PA via AP
“In light of all this, we call again for the authorities to uphold the rule of law and to prove that no one is above it. That includes Mr Morgan, who as editor, knew perfectly well what was going on, as the judge held,” Harry’s statement said.
Harry was not in court for Friday’s hearing, having made a flying trip to Britain earlier this week to see his father after the king had been diagnosed with a form of cancer.
They were able to meet for under an hour on Tuesday before Charles left London for his home in eastern England where he is recuperating as he undergoes outpatient treatment.
Harry, estranged from his family after his criticism of them and the monarchy, left the following day for California.
Reuters
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