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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Jordan King

Prince Harry and Meghan have ‘sights set on moving to Los Angeles’ - report

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are looking to move closer to where most celebrities live in Hollywood, it has been claimed.

The couple were believed to be house-hunting in Malibu but have now decided against this, sources “with direct knowledge” are quoted by TMZ as saying.

While they have not looked at any houses yet, they are reportedly interested in several LA neighbourhoods.

Harry and Meghan are said to be prioritising privacy and community and wanting to live near people who have the same concerns.

They have lived in LA before, when they stayed in Tyler Perry's mansion in Beverly Ridge Estates for several weeks in 2020.

Harry has described their time there as “bliss” in the couple’s docuseries.

He said: “No one knew we were there... We were there for six weeks, and no one knew. My family still thought I was in Canada."

Harry, Meghan and their children currently live in a £14 million mansion in Montecito – quite far from Hollywood.

There has been speculation they are looking to sell since September this year.

It comes as revelations about the Royal Family are again making waves with the release of Omid Scobie's new book Endgame.

The ex-tabloid reporter, who has been called "Meghan's mouthpiece" by his critics, paints a picture of a divided royal family.

But the biggest controversy has been around the Dutch translation of the book, which reportedly names the person accused of asking about Archie's skin colour before he was born.

Endgame was pulled from shelves in the Netherlands on Tuesday, the day of publication, after early reviewers spotted it.

Mr Scobie also apparently names a second Royal who allegedly asked the same thing.

Dutch royal journalist Rick Evers, who has read the translated version, said on ITV's Good Morning Britain on Wednesday that the first name was “very specific”, while the second one was “a little bit vague”.

The version being sold in English-speaking countries does not name the two people, with Mr Scobie stating: “Laws in the United Kingdom prevent me from reporting who they were.”

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