Former Mirror editor Piers Morgan responds to Prince Harry victory in privacy case
Piers Morgan has denied any involvement in phone hacking as he accused Prince Harry of being on a mission to destroy the British monarchy.
Mr Justice Fancourt ruled at the High Court on Friday that Mr Morgan knew about and was involved in phone hacking when he was editor of the Daily Mirror as the Duke of Sussex won damages of £140,600 against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN).
Mr Morgan insisted in a statement on Friday afternoon that he never hacked a phone and never told anyone to do so, before launching scathing attacks on Prince Harry, royal author Omid Scobie and former Labour spin doctor Alastair Campbell.
He told reporters outside his home in west London that the “real mission” of Harry and his wife Megan Markle is not to reform the media but “to destroy the British monarchy”.
It comes after the duke accused the Mirror publisher of “vendetta journalism” in a searing attack following the ruling that he was a victim of phone hacking.
His lawyer David Sherborne said that editors such as Mr Morgan “clearly knew” about the hacking, after the judge accepted evidence that the TalkTV host had been aware of voicemail interception.