
Prince Harry's phone hacking case against the Daily Mail is dismissed in full
The rest of the group are Liz Hurley, Sadie Frost and Sir Simon Hughes.
- Center-left5
- Center1
- Center-right1
- Right2
3 agency rewrites / co-publications detected
Summary
The rest of the group are Liz Hurley, Sadie Frost and Sir Simon Hughes. The publishers agreed to cover his legal costs and pay the equivalent of an additional $370,000 in damages. As the judgement clearly shows, every single article was legitimately sourced.” It potentially leaves the claimants with a huge bill for the case, which is thought to be as much as £50m.
Furthermore, ANL denied any wrongdoing, calling the allegations "preposterous," and arguing the 50 or so articles involved in the lawsuit were based on legally-gather information. A series of extraordinary claims of illegality at the Mail were made by the claimants’ legal team, which alleged “habitual and widespread” wrongdoing. A further hearing in the claims is now expected to take place, lasting two days from July 29.
In addition, Ms Frost claimed that information behind some articles about her had been “hacked from my voicemails”, as they “were word for word” from her messages. The couple claimed their son Zachary’s birth certificate was stolen before they received a copy. 'This is a magnificent vindication of the Daily Mail’s journalism.
The same facts are framed differently: Left — “illegal”, “scandal” ; Center — “invasion”.
Cross-referenced from 8 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
The rest of the group are Liz Hurley, Sadie Frost and Sir Simon Hughes.
reliability moderate2/3 sources
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
The publishers agreed to cover his legal costs and pay the equivalent of an additional $370,000 in damages.
according to CBS News — LatestAs the judgement clearly shows, every single article was legitimately sourced.” It potentially leaves the claimants with a huge bill for the case, which is thought to be as much as £50m.
according to The Guardian - BusinessANL denied any wrongdoing, calling the allegations "preposterous," and arguing the 50 or so articles involved in the lawsuit were based on legally-gather information.
according to CBS News — LatestA series of extraordinary claims of illegality at the Mail were made by the claimants’ legal team, which alleged “habitual and widespread” wrongdoing.
according to The Guardian - BusinessA further hearing in the claims is now expected to take place, lasting two days from July 29.
according to Evening StandardMs Frost claimed that information behind some articles about her had been “hacked from my voicemails”, as they “were word for word” from her messages.
according to The Independent +1The couple claimed their son Zachary’s birth certificate was stolen before they received a copy.
according to The Independent +1'This is a magnificent vindication of the Daily Mail’s journalism.
according to The Independent - UK News +2The budget for ANL totalled £19.9m.
according to The Independent - UK News
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
Left side
- illegal
- scandal
Center
- invasion
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
The rest of the group are Liz Hurley, Sadie Frost and Sir Simon Hughes.
omitted byCenterRight sidecovered byLeft sideRight side