Duchess Meghan speaks out after legal win in privacy lawsuit against newspaper publisher
LONDON â The Duchess of Sussex on Thursday won the latest stage in her long-running privacy lawsuit against a newspaper publisher over its publication of parts of a letter she wrote to her estranged father.
The Court of Appeal in London upheld a High Court ruling in February that publication of the letter that the former Meghan Markle wrote to her father Thomas Markle after she married Prince Harry in 2018 was unlawful and breached her privacy.
The publisher of the Mail on Sunday and the MailOnline website challenged that decision at the Court of Appeal, which held a hearing last month. Dismissing that appeal, senior judge Geoffrey Vos told the court in a brief hearing Thursday that âthe Duchess had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of the letter. Those contents were personal, private and not matters of legitimate public interest.â
In a statement, Meghan, 40, said the ruling was âa victory not just for me, but for anyone who has ever felt scared to stand up for whatâs right.â
âWhile this win is precedent-setting, what matters most is that we are now collectively brave enough to reshape a tabloid industry that conditions people to be cruel, and profits from the lies and pain that they create,â she said.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
More:Duchess Meghan's privacy lawsuit win must run on front page of newspaper, judge orders
Associated Newspapers disputed Meghanâs claim that she didnât intend the letter to be seen by anyone but her father. They said correspondence between Meghan and her then-communications secretary, Jason Knauf, showed the duchess suspected her father might leak the letter to journalists and wrote it with that in mind.
The publisher also argued that the publication of the letter was part of Thomas Markleâs right to reply following a People magazine interview with five of Meghanâs friends alleging he was âcruelly cold-shoulderingâ his daughter in the run-up to her royal wedding.
More:Duchess Meghan thought letter to father might leak, tabloid lawyer claims in UK court
But Vos said that the article, which the Mail on Sunday described as âsensational,â was âsplashed as a new public revelationâ rather than focusing on Thomas Markleâs response to negative media reports about him.
In their appeal, Associated Newspapers had also argued that Meghan made private information public by cooperating with Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand, authors of âFinding Freedom,â a sympathetic book about her and Harry.
The duchessâ lawyers had previously denied that she or Harry collaborated with the authors. But Knauf said in evidence to the court that he gave the writers information, and discussed it with Harry and Meghan.
Knaufâs evidence, which hadnât previously been disclosed, was a dramatic twist in the long-running case.
In response, Meghan apologized for misleading the court about the extent of her cooperation with the bookâs authors.
The duchess said she didnât remember the discussions with Knauf when she gave evidence earlier in the case, âand I apologize to the court for the fact that I had not remembered these exchanges at the time.â
âI had absolutely no wish or intention to mislead the defendant or the court,â she said.
Meghan, a former star of the American TV legal drama âSuits,â married Harry, a grandson of Queen Elizabeth II, at Windsor Castle in May 2018.
More:How watching 'Suits' has changed, now that Meghan Markle is royal
Meghan and Harry announced in early 2020 that they were quitting royal duties and moving to North America, citing what they said were the unbearable intrusions and racist attitudes of the British media. They have settled in Santa Barbara, California, with their two young children.
In her statement Thursday, Meghan strongly condemned Associated Newspapers for treating the lawsuit as âa game with no rules.â She said she had been subject to âdeception, intimidation and calculated attacksâ in the three years since the lawsuit began.
âThe longer they dragged it out, the more they could twist facts and manipulate the public (even during the appeal itself), making a straightforward case extraordinarily convoluted in order to generate more headlines and sell more newspapers â a model that rewards chaos above truth,â she said.