Harry, 38, and nearly 100 celebrities, including actors, sports stars, singers and TV personalities, are suing Mirror Group News Papers, accusing them of accessing private information through phone hacking, fraud and other illegal means between 1991 and 2011.
Prosecutors say the unlawful behavior within the Daily Mirror, Sunday Mirror and Sunday People took place with the full knowledge of senior executives, who they say failed to stop it and worked for the obscure.
The group denies the charges, saying some of the allegations were made too long after they happened, that there is no evidence Harry was the victim of the hack and that senior officials were unaware of any illegal action.
However, the group, according to documents submitted to the High Court in London, admitted on one occasion to having hired a private investigator to illegally collect information on him in a nightclub in 2004, saying that he “expressly apologizes and agrees that (Harry) is entitled to appropriate compensation.” “.
Harry was not present at the start of the session. He is due to testify in early June, to be the first member of the British royal family to do so since the 19th century, according to local media.
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