Former assistant Duchess of Sussex The appeals court learned that after winning a lawsuit with the publisher of the Sunday Mail about reporting a letter to her estranged father, she “regrets” for not providing evidence.
Megan 40, won one High court Earlier this year, after the judge discovered that the letter sent to 77-year-old Thomas Markle in August 2018 was illegal, he started a privacy struggle with the publisher.
Megan’s former communications secretary Jason Knauf and Harry In a witness statement released to the media on Wednesday, a sensational claim was made that when the Duchess wrote the letter, she understood that it might be leaked.
Mr. Knauf’s explosive evidence was filed the day after the newspaper publisher United Press Limited (ANL) appealed against a ruling that the publication of the letter violated her privacy.
Also on Wednesday, Megan apologized to the court in a statement because she did not remember an email exchange. She agreed that Mr. Knauf could provide information to the author of “Looking for Freedom”, a book about dukes and dukes. Lady’s book.
On the third and final day of Thursday’s hearing, further documents revealed that a confidential source contacted the publisher and provided information that Mr. Knauf would resign as the current chief executive officer (CEO). At the end of the year, members of the Royal Foundation regretted that they did not provide evidence during the proceedings in the High Court.
In the witness statement, Keith Mathieson, an attorney for ANL, stated that he believed Mr. Knauf’s evidence was “honest and credible”.
He added: “Mr. Knauf is clearly the central figure in the incident he described.
“He is a senior and trustworthy member of the royal family, and he continues to serve as the chief executive officer of the Royal Foundation.
“His witness statement is measured in tone, and he has been careful not to include evidence beyond the scope of his personal knowledge.
“Given the high-profile nature of this lawsuit and the possibility of his evidence (if admitted) being widely reported, and his position, it is hard to imagine that he would say anything that he believes to be untrue. I know that in his evidence There is nothing that can be reasonably questioned.
Megan sued United Press Limited (ANL), which is also the publisher of MailOnline, because five articles reproduced parts of her father’s “personal and private” letter.
Earlier this year, after Judge Warby ruled that ANL’s release of Megan’s letter to her father was illegal in summary judgment, thereby avoiding the need for a trial, she won her lawsuit.
ANL challenged the ruling in a three-day hearing in the Court of Appeals, arguing that the case should be tried on Megan’s claims, including violations of privacy and copyright.
Andrew Caldecott QC, who represents ANL, told the court on Thursday that Mr. Markle faced “annoying and untrue” allegations in an article published in the US magazine “People” and that it is in the public interest to correct these allegations.
Describing these allegations, he said: “His daughter always did her duty and supported him with incredible generosity from start to finish. He first snubbed her at the wedding, which is one of the most important parts of her life.
“He ignored her request for reconciliation in a love letter and gave a cynical and selfish response.”
He added that Meghan’s letter to Mr. Markle was “not a love letter, not a generous letter”, which is contrary to the statement in the “People” article.
The barrister continued: “When we talked about the first accusation of neglecting her at the wedding… we said that this accusation was clearly wrong.”
Meghan’s Justin Rushbrooke QC previously called the case “very straightforward” and stated that her human rights were “triple-participated” in the open letter.
He said: “This is a letter with extensive content. About half of it was published for the first time by the defendant without the complainant’s consent or even notification.”
In the written evidence she submitted to the Court of Appeal, Megan denied that she thought her father might leak the letter, but “only admitted that it was a possibility.”
She said: “Although we have to admit that everything is possible under the special circumstances of our lives and therefore need to reduce the risk of disclosing the content of the letter, I don’t think my father will sell or leak the letter. The letter is mainly because it will not let He received good attention.”
She later added: “I haven’t heard from him since the week before our wedding, but he seems unlikely to reveal the content because they contain unpleasant truths that deny the media’s lies to him.
“The main purpose of this letter is to encourage my father to stop talking to the media.
“To be clear, I don’t want any content to be published, and I want to ensure that the risk of manipulation or misleading editing is minimized to prevent it from being exploited,” she continued.
Mr. Rushbrook said: “Allowing the defense to go to trial will only encourage further infringement of the plaintiff’s privacy. This all stems from the release of private and very personal letters, while giving the defendant the opportunity to make huge profits from the media circus. It will inevitably produce results.”
Sir Jeffrey Voss sat with Mrs. Victoria Sharp and Justice Bean and said that they would take time to consider their decision and make a ruling in the future.



