Prince Harry launched legal action against MGN after bumping into barrister in France
Prince Harry arriving at the Rolls Buildings (Aaron Chown/PA)
Britain's Prince Harry launched his hacking legal action against the publisher of the Daily Mirror after bumping into a barrister to the rich and famous in France.
Harry told the High Court in London he had a chance meeting in 2018 with David Sherborne, who is representing the duke in his individual claim against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN).
Mr Sherborneâs clients have included Harry's mother Diana, Princess of Wales, Elton John, Hollywood actor Michael Douglas, former British prime minister Tony Blair, and in the Wagatha Christie trial, Colleen Rooney.
Harry described subsequently speaking to solicitors to discuss the âabuse, intrusion and hateâ he and his wife Meghan Markle were experiencing.
He said: âI think it was a discussion about somehow how to find a way to put the abuse, intrusion and hate that was coming towards me and my wife and seeing if there was any way to find a different course of action without relying on the institutionâs way.â
Andrew Green KC, for MGN, asked him: âWhen did you first go to solicitors to seek advice about a possible claim against MGN?â
Harry, giving evidence on his second day in the witness box, replied: âI didnât go to them. I bumped into Mr Sherborne in France⊠itâs in my book.â
The duke said he believed the encounter was around 2018.
Harry wrote in his autobiography that he and Meghan were introduced to an unnamed barrister by Elton John and his husband David Furnish while holidaying with the pop star.
In the excerpt, which was not presented or read to the court, Harry wrote that the barrister was âa lovely fellow who knew more about the phone-hacking scandal than anyone Iâd ever metâ and who suggested the duke hire his own lawyer.
Elton settled a phone-hacking claim against News Group Newspapers (NGN) in 2019, and is part of a current joint claim brought by Harry and others, represented by Mr Sherborne, over alleged unlawful information gathering at Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL).
Mr Green KC suggested it was not concern over a specific MGN story that led the duke to seek legal advice, with Harry agreeing.
The barrister asked: âSo prior to bumping into Mr Sherborne in France, you hadnât sought advice from lawyers about whether you had a claim against the Mirror Group?â
The duke said: âNo. Nothing at all.â
Mr Green said it âwasnât concern over any particular articleâ which prompted Harry to go to solicitors.
Harry replied: âNo, I was never shown anything.â He added that it was âall contained within the palace and even if I had I wouldnât have been allowedâ to make a complaint.
Mr Green suggested the duke had never been able to identify any story in an MGN newspaper which was written as a result of a voicemail message on his phone.
âThatâs a question for my legal team ⊠but I believe phone hacking started at the Mirror Group,â Harry responded.
âThere is hard evidence to suggest an incredible amount of suspiciousness and I believe that burner phones were used extensively.â
Asked if there was a particular voicemail he believes was intercepted, he answered: âI canât remember a specific voicemail that I left over the last 20 years.â
The duke, 38, is suing MGN for damages, claiming journalists at the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday People were linked to methods including phone hacking, so-called âblaggingâ or gaining information by deception, and use of private investigators for unlawful activities.
He alleges that about 140 articles published between 1996 and 2010 by MGN titles contained information gathered using unlawful methods, and 33 have been selected to be considered at the trial.
MGN is contesting his claim and has either denied or not admitted that articles about Harry being examined at the trial involved phone hacking or unlawful activity.
Harry started legal proceedings against MGN in 2019.






