Prince Harry's lawsuit against The Sun is part of a long saga of alleged tabloid misbehavior

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Prince Harry's lawsuit against The Sun is part of a long saga of alleged tabloid misbehavior
Author: Jill Lawless
Published: Jan, 21 2025 05:09

Prince Harry’s trial against the publisher of The Sun, which opens Tuesday, follows two decades of legal drama over the cutthroat practices of the British press in the days when newspapers sold millions of copies and shaped the popular conversation.

The scandal destroyed a Rupert Murdoch -owned newspaper and cost Murdoch hundreds of millions of dollars to settle lawsuits from the targets of tabloid attention. And it fueled Harry’s quest to tame the British press, which he blames for dividing his family, blighting his life and hounding both his late mother Princess Diana and his wife, Meghan Markle.

Here are key moments in the saga:. November 2005. Murdoch’s Sunday tabloid the News of the World reports that Prince William has a knee injury. A Buckingham Palace complaint prompts a police inquiry that reveals information for the story came from a voicemail that was hacked.

January 2007. Glenn Mulcaire, a private investigator working for the News of the World, is sentenced to six months in prison and the paper’s royal editor Clive Goodman to four months for hacking the phones of royal aides to listen to messages left by William and others. Goodman later acknowledges hacking William’s phone 35 times and that of his then-girlfriend Kate Middleton — now Princess of Wales — more than 150 times.

Murdoch’s company initially maintains that the illicit behavior was the work of two rogue employees working without editors’ knowledge. January 2011. British police reopen an investigation into tabloid phone hacking after the News of the World says it has found “significant new information.”.

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