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Home / Lifestyle

Prince Harry drags William into battle against Daily Mail

Victoria Ward
Daily Telegraph UK·
1 Oct, 2025 06:49 PM5 mins to read

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The Duke of Sussex has involved the Prince of Wales in his legal battle against Associated Newspapers. Photo / Getty Images

The Duke of Sussex has involved the Prince of Wales in his legal battle against Associated Newspapers. Photo / Getty Images

The Duke of Sussex has dragged his brother, the Prince of Wales, into his legal battle against the Daily Mail’s publisher.

Lawyers for high-profile figures, including the duke, have alleged that private investigators were paid to spy on the Prince and Princess of Wales.

The move risks deepening the rift between the brothers, and comes weeks after the duke reunited with the King for the first time in 19 months over tea at Clarence House.

The duke is one of seven claimants suing Associated Newspapers for alleged privacy breaches dating back up to 30 years. Associated, which also publishes the Mail on Sunday, denies any wrongdoing and says the “lurid” claims are preposterous.

In written submissions to the High Court, lawyers for the group claim that payments were made to private investigators for information about the Prince and Princess of Wales.

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One concerns a payment made in 2003, allegedly for information about Prince William’s Out of Africa-themed 21st birthday party.

Another invoice from a different private investigator refers to mobile phone data belonging to “his associate, Catherine Middleton, now the Princess of Wales”.

There is also information about two occupancy searches relating to the Middletons’ family address and 10 phone numbers from a “family and friends” list, in which the princess’ mobile number was highlighted.

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The claimants, including Sir Elton John, his husband David Furnish, Baroness Lawrence of Clarendon, Sadie Frost, Liz Hurley and Sir Simon Hughes, have accused the newspaper group of carrying out or commissioning unlawful activities such as hiring private investigators to place listening devices inside cars, “blagging” private records, burglaries to order, and accessing and recording private phone conversations.

Associated is seeking to limit the scope of the legal action, arguing that specific elements of the claimants’ case should be thrown out, such as arguments relating to the duke’s previous legal battles with other newspaper publishers, which Justice Nicklin has already ruled should not be included.

David Sherborne, for the group, claims that an invoice dated August 25, 2003 was entitled “Out of Africa Story Royal Party Enqs”.

The barrister alleged this invoice was linked to a Daily Mail story from June that year with “extensive” details about the prince’s 21st birthday party – the day before the party was due to take place.

Sherborne also alleged that an invoice from a different private investigator allegedly shows a journalist commissioning him to provide a “mobile phone conversion” related to the Princess of Wales, as well as phone numbers from a “family and friends” list.

The lawyer says that in seeking to prove his claim, the duke will rely on an entry found in a spreadsheet belonging to Steve Whittamore, a retired British private investigator convicted in 2004 of breaching the Data Protection Act.

It emerged in 2011 that Whittamore had been asked to obtain confidential information about the then Catherine Middleton when she was a student at St Andrews University.

He kept four colour-coded A4 books detailing his business dealings with journalists, one of which revealed he had been given her mobile phone number.

Sherborne states that the “yellow book” also contained “two occupancy searches relating to Ms Middleton’s family address”, as well as 10 phone numbers from a “Family and Friends” list, “in which Mr Whittamore identified Ms Middleton’s mobile phone number”.

Associated argued that the Daily Mail journalist named in relation to Whittamore’s Middleton file was not involved in the claim.

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The publisher also pointed out that the information relating to the Middleton family was first disclosed in the Operation Motorman books, which were “in the claimants’ control” and were widely reported more than 10 years ago, suggesting that as such, the proposed amendment was “very late”.

Justice Nicklin also expressed frustration that changes were being made so close to the trial.

“We are now two months away from the trial date and here you are with amendments that could have been put forward years ago,” he told Sherborne.

Antony White KC, for the publisher, told the court that lawyers for Harry and the others were either being “tin-eared” or openly defiant.

Sherborne said in court filings that such a “nuclear option” was unjustified. He argued that the generic case was “a critical and fundamental component” of the lawsuit.

A trial is scheduled to begin in January.

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‘Secret agreement’

The latest revelations mark the second time that the duke has involved his brother in his legal battles against the tabloid press.

In March 2023, he revealed that William had quietly settled a phone hacking claim for a “very large sum” against News Group Newspapers (NGN), the publisher of the Sun, three years earlier.

The Prince of Wales allegedly received the payment, understood to have been for about £1m ($2.3m), in 2020 after bringing a legal claim against the owner of the Sun and now defunct News of the World newspaper.

The details were revealed in documents submitted by the duke as part of his own legal battle with NGN as he argued that such it proved the existence of a “secret agreement” made between the royal household and the publisher, which he believed was made in part to help satisfy the Queen. The judge later told the duke that he found the prospect of such a deal “implausible”.

The latest references to the Waleses are made in court documents lodged with the court as part of a two-day case management hearing in the Associated case.

Frost and Furnish were in court for the hearing while other claimants tuned in via video link.

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At one stage, Prince Harry sent a message via the remote system to Lawrence asking her to mute her microphone as those logged in could hear her discussing her shopping. “Doreen, please mute your phone,” he said.

The hearing continues.

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