The Duke of Sussex had to be dragged โkicking and screamingโ by lawyers for the publisher of The Sun into allowing his personal emails
ย to be examined for potential evidence in their ongoing legal battle, the High Court was told.
Harry was accused of โobfuscationโ and creating an โobstacle courseโ by News Group Newspapers (NGN) during its effortsย
to find relevant material for the litigation over the dukeโs allegations of unlawful information gathering.
At a one-day hearing on Thursday, the publisherโs lawyer said they were โextremely concernedโ
ย about the deletion of exchanges via the Signal messaging service between Harry and John Moehringer, the ghostwriter of the royalโs memoir Spare.
The dukeโs legal team told a judge that NGN had wrongly characterised his approach to disclosing material, accusing the publisher of embarking on a โclassic fishing expeditionโ for potential information that was โentirely unnecessary and disproportionateโ.
Harry, 39, alleges he was targeted by journalists and private investigators working for NGN, which also published the now-defunct News Of The World.
He is among a number of people to bring cases against the publisher, with a full trial of some cases due to be held in January.
The publisher has previously denied unlawful activity took place at The Sun.
At the hearing in London, NGNโs lawyers asked judge Mr Justice Fancourt to order Harryโs current solicitors to carry out searches of Harryโs texts, Whatsapp and Signal messages, laptop and hard drives.
The publisher also wants Harryโs lawyers to write to his former solicitors at law firm Harbottle & Lewis and members of the โroyal householdโ โ Sir Clive Alderton, private secretary to the King and Sir Michael Stevens, the keeper of the privy purse โ to request communication records concerning the duke.
NGN wants Harry to disclose information that could relate to when he knew he could bring a potential case against the publisher and whether the filing of his claim in September 2019 was made within a legal time limit, the court was told.
Mr Justice Fancourt heard that some 11,570 emails from the dukeโs now-closed [email protected] email account were being reviewed for potential disclosure by his lawyers.
Anthony Hudson KC, representing NGN, said: โWeโve had to drag those out of the claimant kicking and screaming.โ
The barrister said the disclosure process was โincredibly simple but for the obstacle course created by the claimantโ.
โHe doesnโt want to have to do this for whatever reason,โ Mr Hudson added.
In written arguments, he said Harryโs Signal conversations with Mr Moehringer had been โwipedโ before the publication of Spare, adding: โIt therefore appears that a substantial source of relevant documents in the claimantโs control has been deleted during the currency of these proceedings.โ
He also said: โIt appears that all documents relating to the writing of Spare were destroyed before publication and after the commencement of these proceedings, a matter which gives rise to real concern as to whether the claimant has complied with his obligation to preserve potentially relevant documentsโ.
David Sherborne, for Harry, said he opposed the publisherโs disclosure bid, adding that he had been โmonstrouslyโ characterised by NGN to give an impression that was โquite wrongโ.
He said NGN had previously deleted โmillions of emailsโ as a way of โhiding incriminating evidenceโ.
Mr Sherborne said it was the โheight of hypocrisy to suggest that obstacles are being put in the way by the claimant who obviously has something to hideโ.
He said Harry was voluntarily allowing a search of his emails that had taken 150 hours and cost ยฃ50,000.
The barrister told the court that NGN had โfailed to pursue disclosure in any form of timely fashionโ.
In written arguments, Mr Sherborne said Harry had already searched his Californian home for material, that he no longer had laptops, mobile phones or data backups from before September 2013.
Harryโs Hotmail email address used before 2014 had been deactivated, he said, while there were โno relevant social media accounts that fall to be searchedโ.
Royal aides had also been contacted and โhave confirmed they do not hold relevant documentsโ, Mr Sherborne added.
Mr Justice Fancourt is due to give a ruling on Thursday afternoon.
ย Follow us to see more useful information, as well as to give us more motivation to update more useful information for you.
Source: Tampa Bay Times