A British judge on Friday told The Mail on Sunday to print on its front page a notice saying it was losing the privacy and copyright lawsuit against the Duchess of Sussex. Meghan MarkleMeghan Markle Judge orders UK paper to print first-page notice of Meghan Markle’s judicial loss Former ‘Suits’ star defends Meghan Markle amid real controversy over Buckingham Palace accusation that Meghan Markle intimidated staff MORE.
A demand was presented in 2019 by Markle and her husband, Prince Harry, after The Mail on Sunday obtained a letter from Markle to her father, Thomas Markle, and published five articles in The Mail on Sunday and on The MailOnline website about it.
Markle said the publication of these articles infringed on his copyright and invaded his privacy.
High Court Judge Lord Justice Warby agreed with the royal couple’s claim that the publication infringed Markle’s rights, and now the Associated Newspapers must announce its loss on the cover of The Mail on Sunday and make a statement to The MailOnline for a week with a hyperlink showing the full court ruling, The Guardian reported.
Markle had wanted the online statement to be updated for six months, but the judge rejected that request.
The Associated Newspaper may file an application to appeal the decision directly to the appellate court, The Guardian reported, although Warby does not believe the outcome is any different.
The judge says yes “do not consider that there is any real possibility that the appellate court will reach a different conclusion as to the outcome of the claim for misuse of private information or on the issues I decided in the claim for copyright. author “.