Prince Harry settled privacy and data protection claims Thursday against a news agency that hovered over his home in a helicopter and took photos directly into his living room and bedroom.
Harry accepted substantial damages and an apology from Splash B次元官网网址 and Picture Agency. The figure was not disclosed.
In a statement read at High Court in London on HarryB次元官网网址檚 behalf, his attorney Gerrard Tyrrell said the rural retreat in Oxfordshire, southern England was chosen because of B次元官网网址渢he high level of privacy it afforded,B次元官网网址 but that now he and his wife Meghan feel B次元官网网址渢hey are no longer able to live at the property.B次元官网网址
It said that in January, Splash chartered a helicopter that flew over the home at a low altitude, and photos it took were published by several media outlets.
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The agency pledged to B次元官网网址渃ease and desist from selling, issuing, publishing or making available the photographs.B次元官网网址 Splash also promised B次元官网网址渘ot repeat its conduct by using any aerial means to take photographs or film footage of the dukeB次元官网网址檚 private home.B次元官网网址
Splash says it B次元官网网址渞ecognized that this situation represents an error of judgmentB次元官网网址 and promised it would not happen again.
The royals have in the past sought to defend their privacy rights in the courts. HarryB次元官网网址檚 brother William and his wife Kate sued a French gossip magazine, for example, in a case of topless photos of the Duchess of Cambridge.
The couple filed a complaint after the photos were published in the magazine Closer and a regional newspaper in 2012, the year after their wedding.
Harry has complained in the past about intrusive press coverage. He and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, recently moved from central London to a more secluded home, Frogmore Cottage, near Windsor Castle some 25 miles (40 kilometres) west of London.
The Associated Press
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