Prince Harry has suffered one of the biggest legal setbacks in his long-running battle against Britain’s tabloid press after London’s High Court dismissed every claim in his privacy lawsuit against the publisher of the Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday. The ruling delivers a significant victory for Associated Newspapers while leaving the Duke of Sussex facing potentially millions of pounds in legal costs.
Major Court Defeat
Prince Harry has suffered one of the most significant legal defeats of his long-running campaign against the British tabloid press after losing his major privacy lawsuit against Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL), the publisher of the Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday. Joined by Sir Elton John, David Furnish and actress Elizabeth Hurley, the Duke of Sussex alleged that the newspaper group had engaged in widespread unlawful information gathering over nearly two decades.
436-Page Judgment
In a sweeping 436-page judgment, London High Court Judge Mr Justice Matthew Nicklin dismissed all 97 allegations in their entirety, concluding that the claimants had failed to establish that ANL had obtained their private information through illegal means. The ruling marks a major victory for the publisher while dealing a costly setback to one of Prince Harry’s highest-profile legal battles against the British media.
The Allegations
The lawsuit centered on allegations that ANL relied on numerous unlawful methods to obtain confidential information between 1993 and 2011. The claimants accused the publisher of hiring private investigators to install listening devices in homes and vehicles, intercepting private telephone conversations, hacking voicemail messages, paying corrupt police officers for confidential information and using so-called “blagging” techniques to illegally obtain medical and travel records.
Evidence Falls Short
Throughout the proceedings, however, the court concluded that the accusations were not supported by sufficient evidence. Judge Nicklin determined that while the claimants may have sincerely believed unlawful activity had occurred, their suspicions could not replace concrete proof. The judgment reinforced the principle that serious allegations require clear evidence rather than assumptions based on the nature of published stories.
A Key Legal Argument Rejected
A central argument presented by Prince Harry’s legal team was also dismissed. His lawyers argued that because many articles contained highly personal information—and because Associated Newspapers could no longer identify precisely how some stories had been sourced decades later—it should be inferred that the information had been obtained unlawfully. Judge Nicklin rejected that reasoning, ruling that it was «not a permissible approach.»
Lawful Journalism Accepted
Instead, the court accepted testimony from Daily Mail journalists describing lawful reporting methods. Evidence showed that many stories had been sourced through publicists, royal aides, friends and other legitimate contacts familiar with the individuals involved. The judgment concluded that publishing private information does not automatically prove that journalists obtained it through criminal or unlawful means.
Criticism of the Claimants
Judge Nicklin also criticized significant portions of the evidence compiled by the claimants’ legal team. He described parts of the research as «inconsistent,» «unconvincing,» and ultimately resembling a «fishing expedition» rather than a persuasive body of evidence capable of proving widespread unlawful conduct. Those findings represented a decisive rejection of the broader allegations made against Associated Newspapers.
A Contrast With Earlier Victories
The ruling stands in sharp contrast to Prince Harry’s previous successes against other British newspaper groups. The Duke previously won claims against Mirror Group Newspapers and later secured a substantial settlement with News Group Newspapers in separate cases involving different publishers, different evidence and different legal circumstances. This latest decision therefore marks a dramatic reversal in his broader legal campaign against sections of the British press.
Millions at Stake
The financial consequences could be considerable. Legal costs in the case are estimated to exceed £50 million, or roughly $66.8 million, and a follow-up hearing scheduled for July 29 will determine how much of Associated Newspapers’ legal expenses Prince Harry and the other claimants will be required to pay. ANL welcomed the ruling as a «momentous victory for the free press.»
Harry Rejects the Verdict
Prince Harry responded forcefully in a joint statement with fellow claimant Baroness Doreen Lawrence, declaring, «We came to Court seeking justice and accountability. But we have received neither.» He argued that the ruling conflicted with previous judgments involving phone-hacking litigation and stated, «This judgment represents a complete reversal of the position which previous Judges have taken in relation to the hacking claims successfully brought against both News Group Newspapers and Mirror Group Newspapers (who were represented by, at the time, the Judge who made this decision). Generic findings about various private investigators that were held by the Courts in these parallel claims to have carried out unlawful activity at the very same time in relation to similar stories and well-known individuals have been wholly ignored. The fact that this Court has chosen to dismiss them represents an inconsistency which is hard to understand or reconcile with common sense, or the evidence heard in the courtroom itself.»
"A Complete and Obvious Whitewash"
The Duke continued his criticism of the decision by adding, «When the Court says there is not sufficient evidence of wrongdoing, despite the documents showing otherwise, then one does wonder how justice was ever going to be achieved.» He concluded by describing the ruling as «It is a complete and obvious whitewash, but sadly not altogether unexpected.» The judgment closes one of Britain’s largest privacy lawsuits in recent years while leaving Prince Harry facing both a major legal defeat and potentially millions of pounds in costs.