‘Prince Harry told me I was being hacked’

Daniel de SimoneInvestigator
Stephen Lawrence’s mother, BBC, the Daily Mail, the alleged espionage by the prince Harry, who revealed evidence, he said.
In his first interview on the subject, Barones Doreen Lawrence said that Prince Harry was “endured” by what he found.
Together with Prince Harry, Sir Elton John and other public figures, Daily Mail’s publisher’s related newspapers sue in London high court.
Associated newspapers rejected their allegations that they had hacked their phones and call them “unreasonable smear”.
In 2022, Barones Lawrence took the Daily Mail to court with Prince Harry. He claimed that his son was illegally spying to gather information about the investigation of the 1993 murder.
Stephen Lawrence was 18 years old, stabbed in a racist attack in Eldham, south of London.
So far, Barones Lawrence has not talked to the public about hacking allegations.
Talking to the BBC, he said that he first learned some of them after receiving the unexpected “contact from Prince Harry”, who successfully took other newspaper groups to court.
He told the BBC that Prince Harry was “busy looking at his own case, and then his name continues to break” and said, “That’s why I felt that I had to know that.”
The Prince said that he had the knowledge he would want to know and that he had met with the lawyers who told him that he had a espionage.

His reaction to the allegations could not believe: “Why should everyone want to listen to my calls, hacking my phone? The only thing I’ve been trying to do for years is trying to get justice for my son.”
The allegations in the Supreme Court include allegations that special inspectors working for the Daily Mail touched Barones Lawrence’s home phone and hacking voice messages. The article is also accused of being assigned to researchers to monitor bank accounts and phone bills.
The Associated newspapers did not make a statement in response to the BBC, but previously rejected the allegations and rejected that “their journalism offered a Trenchhant defense against the allegations of telephone holding”.
“He refused under the oath that journalists have assigned or received information derived from the phone holding, touching the phone, making errors, making a computer or e-mail, or receiving information derived from order.”
The publisher says, “According to his previous statements, the allegations are unreasonable and without foundation” and “relevant stories, many of whom were published 20 or more years ago and are not subject to any complaints at that time, are the product of responsible journalism based on legitimate resources”.

The related newspapers could not get the case out of the Supreme Court and the case is expected to be heard in January. Barones Lawrence said it was an open “case” to BBC.
Other common claims include Sir Elton John’s husband David Furnish, actors Sadie Frost and Liz Hurley and former liberal democratic politician Sir Simon Hughes.
Barones Lawrence said that being a part of such a group that took the mail was “a little intimidating”.
He thought that he had previously “trust” to the Daily Mail and wanted to “fight for Stephen’s rights”. The article carried out a campaign on behalf of the Lawrence family and published a famous preliminary page in 1997 and named five main suspects for the murder.
But now he says that his trust is completely broken: “I don’t trust them in any way. I don’t trust them at all.”
He asked what he wanted to be in the case: “Daily Mail apologized for what they did – and a public apology – I want to see. As a family, they lived a lot and added to trauma.”